Structure of motor nerve terminals in chickens with hereditary muscular dystrophy.
J S Gunther, M S Letinsky
Index: Muscle Nerve 8(7) , 568-75, (1985)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
The structure and size of 1-week to 1-year-old normal (line 412) and dystrophic (line 413) chicken motor nerve terminals were studied using combined pre- and postsynaptic histologic endplate staining. The main result is that adult dystrophic terminals have abnormal structure and are significantly smaller than normal. These differences occurred progressively during development. At 1 week ex ovo, dystrophic motor nerve terminals were similar to normals in size and appearance. By 8 weeks, differences between normal and dystrophic terminal size and structural organization began to emerge. Qualitatively, beginning at 8 weeks and becoming more frequent by 1 year of age (the endpoint of this study), dystrophic motor endplates differed from normal in having: generally smaller synaptic boutons, often separated by extremely thin branching interconnectives; increasing incidence of multiple innervation; and frequent occurrences of apparent partial or total denervation, terminal sprouting, and reinnervation.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2015-05-01
[Arch. Virol. 160(5) , 1211-7, (2015)]
2015-08-14
[Nanoscale 7 , 13125-34, (2015)]
2014-11-01
[Pflugers Arch. 466(11) , 2153-65, (2014)]
1985-06-01
[Histochem. J. 17(6) , 707-15, (1985)]
1982-01-01
[J. Histochem. Cytochem. 30(1) , 12-20, (1982)]