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Early innervation of skeletal muscle during tail regeneration in urodele amphibians.
Authors:Y R Thouveny  T E Komorowski  J P Arsanto  B M Carlson
Institution:Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Medical School, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109.
Abstract:The innervation pattern of skeletal muscles was studied in the normal and regenerating tail of Notophthalmus viridescens. Silver staining for nerve endings and histochemical localization of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) were used for light microscopy. In In normal musculature, AChE positive reactions were localized at the ends of the muscle fibers where they are anchored on connective tissue septa by myotendinous junctions. At this level, silver staining shows nerve terminals forming endplates. During regeneration, positive reactions for AChE appear de novo as dense plates localized at the ends of the newly formed myotubes. The mechanisms involved in the localization of AChE on this surface seem to operate before previous local contacts by nerve terminals. From the ultrastructural data and immunohistochemical results with anti-laminin antibody, these observations suggest that regenerating muscle fibers determine a region of post-synaptic specialization in close relation with the organization of myotendinous regions and basement membrane formation. Nerve-muscle contacts appear at these levels at stage IV (15-20 days after amputation) in the stump and in the rostral part of the regenerate (transition zone). These nerve terminals are provided by the disorganized peripheral nervous system of the injured segment. In the regenerate a similar pattern of AChE reaction can be seen in every myotube, differentiating according to a rostro-caudal gradient. Innervation at the ends of the muscle fibers is in spatiotemporal relation with the exists of the ventral roots from the regenerating nerve cord as the regenerate continues to grow in length.
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