Motoneuron projection patterns in chick embryonic limbs with a double complement of dorsal thigh musculature |
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Authors: | C C Lance-Jones |
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Affiliation: | 1. Jefferson Institute of Molecular Medicine and Scleroderma Center, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia 19107, USA;2. Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, USA;3. Jefferson Institute of Molecular Medicine and Scleroderma Center, Thomas Jefferson University, USA;4. Division of Rheumatology, Department of Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University, USA;1. Department of Chemistry, Cotton University, Guwahati, Assam 781001, India;2. Departament de Química, Universitat de les Illes Balears, Crta de Valldemossa km 7.7, Palma de Mallorca, (Baleares) 07122, Spain;3. Department of Zoology, Cell & Biochemical Technology Laboratory, Cotton University, Guwahati, Assam 781001, India |
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Abstract: | During the normal development of the chick, lateral motoneurons within the lumbosacral motor column of the spinal cord consistently project to muscles of dorsal origin within the limb while medial motoneurons project to muscles of ventral origin. To determine if specific cues arising from each type of target are the dominant guidance cues used by lateral and medial motoneurons to create this pattern, I examined motoneuron projections in embryonic chick limbs with a double complement of dorsal thigh musculature and no ventral musculature. Results indicate that cues associated with muscles of a specific developmental origin do not invariably dominate. Before and after the major period of motoneuron death, all muscles in dorsal limb regions (host) were innervated by lateral or dorsal pool neurons. Most ventrally positioned (donor) muscles were innervated by medial or ventral pool neurons. Only the donor iliofibularis, a muscle located very near to its original source of innervation, received projections from some lateral neurons. Within the limb proper, medial or ventral pool neurons projected to donor muscles in a patterned manner suggesting that they were following nonspecific regional cues and perhaps also responding to the availability of uninnervated target tissue. I conclude that axon sorting into distinct lateral and medial classes is independent of limb target complement and that subsequent pathway choice is a separate event governed by both specific target cues and other guidance mechanisms. |
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