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The effects of transplantation and regeneration of sensory neurons on a somatotopic map in the cricket central nervous system
Authors:RK Murphey  SE Johnson  WW Walthall
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, State University of New York at Albany, Albany, New York 12222 USA
Abstract:The restoration of the cercal afferent projection of crickets was examined after severing the cercal nerve or amputating the cercus and reimplanting it. After either maneuver the sensory neurons regenerated arborizations in the central nervous system (CNS) within about 1 month. In order to assess the role of the pathway taken to the CNS in controlling the growth of the terminal arborization, we transplantated left cerci to the right side of the host. The operation mismatched the mediolateral axes of host and graft tissues. In one-third of the neurons examined, the axon trajectories of the regenerated neurons were altered. The terminal arborizations in these cases were unusual; for example, one neuron arborized in an abnormal area as well as in its normal area. In rare instances this neuron arborized only in incorrect areas of the CNS. Thus, it appears that axon pathway can have an effect on the central structure of sensory neurons. However, in most cases after the surgery, the neurons were able to reach their proper target areas even by circuitous routes. The proximodistal coordinate of the map is isomorphic with sensory neuron age, because the most distal receptors are produced early in postembryonic development and new ones are added proximally at each molt. We tested the possibility that the order of differentiation was critical for generating the afferent projection with two experiments. First, the distal cercus including the distal members of the clavate array was amputated. The specimen regenerated an entire distal cercus including distal clavate receptors. When newly generated, distal neurons were stained, the terminal arbors were identical to the amputated neurons they replaced. In this case, both age and order of arrival were reversed from normal yet the topographic projection pattern was not altered. Second, we transplanted young cerci onto older specimens and then examined the regenerated arbors of the transplanted sensory neuron. The immature neuron arborized in the adult nervous system exactly as the mature homolog. Thus the age of a sensory neuron did not appear to be a controlling variable in the elaboration of a terminal arborization. The significance of these results is discussed in the context of two models for development of orderly neuronal connections.
Keywords:To whom correspondence should be addressed  
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