• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Selective Innervation of Fast and Slow Muscle Regions during Early Chick Neuromuscular Development
  • Beteiligte: Rafuse, Victor F.; Milner, Louise D.; Landmesser, Lynn T.
  • Erschienen: Society for Neuroscience, 1996
  • Erschienen in: The Journal of Neuroscience
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.1523/jneurosci.16-21-06864.1996
  • ISSN: 0270-6474; 1529-2401
  • Schlagwörter: General Neuroscience
  • Entstehung:
  • Anmerkungen:
  • Beschreibung: <jats:p>The electrical properties of adult motoneurons are well matched to the contractile properties of the fast or slow muscle fibers that they innervate. How this precise matching occurs developmentally is not known. To investigate whether motoneurons exhibit selectivity in innervating discrete muscle regions, containing either fast or slow muscle fibers during early neuromuscular development, we caused embryonic chick hindlimb muscles to become innervated by segmentally inappropriate motoneurons. We used the<jats:italic>in vitro</jats:italic>spinal cord–hindlimb preparation to identify electrophysiologically the pools of foreign motoneurons innervating the posterior iliotibialis (pITIB), an all-fast muscle, and the iliofibularis (IFIB), a partitioned muscle containing discrete fast and slow regions. The results showed that the pITIB and the fast region of the IFIB were exclusively innervated by motoneurons that normally supply fast muscles. In contrast, the slow region of the IFIB was always innervated by motoneuron pools that normally supply slow muscles. Some experimental IFIB muscles lacked a fast region and were innervated solely by “slow” motoneurons. In addition, the intramuscular nerve branching patterns were always appropriate to the fast–slow nature of the muscle (region) innervated. The selective innervation was found early in the motoneuron death period, and we found no evidence that motoneurons grew into appropriate muscle regions, but failed to form functional contacts. Together, these results support the hypothesis that different classes of motoneurons exhibit molecular differences that allow them to project selectively to, and innervate, muscle fibers of the appropriate type during early neuromuscular development.</jats:p>
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