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DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION : I. Cytological and Cytochemical Studies on the Neuromuscular Junction of Differentiating Muscle in the Regenerating Limb of the Newt Triturus

Development of the neuromuscular junction on differentiating muscle was investigated in the regenerating limb of the newt Triturus. Motor end-plate formation begins when vesicle-filled axon terminations approach differentiating muscle cells that have reached the stage of a multinucleate cell contain...

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Autor principal: Lentz, Thomas L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1969
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2107686/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5792331
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author Lentz, Thomas L.
author_facet Lentz, Thomas L.
author_sort Lentz, Thomas L.
collection PubMed
description Development of the neuromuscular junction on differentiating muscle was investigated in the regenerating limb of the newt Triturus. Motor end-plate formation begins when vesicle-filled axon terminations approach differentiating muscle cells that have reached the stage of a multinucleate cell containing myofibrils. Slight ridges or elevations occur on the muscle surface, and there is an increase in density of the cytoplasm immediately beneath the plasma membrane of the elevation. The axon becomes more closely approximated to the muscle cell and comes to lie in a shallow depression or gutter on the surface of the muscle. The surface ridges increase in length and constrict at their bases to form junctional folds. In the axon terminal, focal accumulations of vesicles are found where the axon contour projects slightly opposite the secondary synaptic clefts. Cholinesterase activity in the developing junctions was demonstrated by the thiolacetic acid-lead nitrate method. Enzymatic activity is not found on intercellular nerve fibers or the muscle surface prior to close approximation of axon endings and muscle. Eserine- and DFP-sensitive activity appears concurrently with morphological differentiation. Activity occurs in membranous tubulovesicles in the sarcoplasm subjacent to the neuromuscular junction and in association with the sarcolemma. The largest reaction deposits occur at the tips of the emerging junctional folds. Smaller and less numerous localizations occur on the axon membrane and within the axoplasm. It is concluded from these studies that the nerve endings have an inductive effect on both the morphological and chemical specializations of the neuromuscular junction.
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spelling pubmed-21076862008-05-01 DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION : I. Cytological and Cytochemical Studies on the Neuromuscular Junction of Differentiating Muscle in the Regenerating Limb of the Newt Triturus Lentz, Thomas L. J Cell Biol Article Development of the neuromuscular junction on differentiating muscle was investigated in the regenerating limb of the newt Triturus. Motor end-plate formation begins when vesicle-filled axon terminations approach differentiating muscle cells that have reached the stage of a multinucleate cell containing myofibrils. Slight ridges or elevations occur on the muscle surface, and there is an increase in density of the cytoplasm immediately beneath the plasma membrane of the elevation. The axon becomes more closely approximated to the muscle cell and comes to lie in a shallow depression or gutter on the surface of the muscle. The surface ridges increase in length and constrict at their bases to form junctional folds. In the axon terminal, focal accumulations of vesicles are found where the axon contour projects slightly opposite the secondary synaptic clefts. Cholinesterase activity in the developing junctions was demonstrated by the thiolacetic acid-lead nitrate method. Enzymatic activity is not found on intercellular nerve fibers or the muscle surface prior to close approximation of axon endings and muscle. Eserine- and DFP-sensitive activity appears concurrently with morphological differentiation. Activity occurs in membranous tubulovesicles in the sarcoplasm subjacent to the neuromuscular junction and in association with the sarcolemma. The largest reaction deposits occur at the tips of the emerging junctional folds. Smaller and less numerous localizations occur on the axon membrane and within the axoplasm. It is concluded from these studies that the nerve endings have an inductive effect on both the morphological and chemical specializations of the neuromuscular junction. The Rockefeller University Press 1969-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2107686/ /pubmed/5792331 Text en Copyright © 1969 by The Rockefeller University Press. This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lentz, Thomas L.
DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION : I. Cytological and Cytochemical Studies on the Neuromuscular Junction of Differentiating Muscle in the Regenerating Limb of the Newt Triturus
title DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION : I. Cytological and Cytochemical Studies on the Neuromuscular Junction of Differentiating Muscle in the Regenerating Limb of the Newt Triturus
title_full DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION : I. Cytological and Cytochemical Studies on the Neuromuscular Junction of Differentiating Muscle in the Regenerating Limb of the Newt Triturus
title_fullStr DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION : I. Cytological and Cytochemical Studies on the Neuromuscular Junction of Differentiating Muscle in the Regenerating Limb of the Newt Triturus
title_full_unstemmed DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION : I. Cytological and Cytochemical Studies on the Neuromuscular Junction of Differentiating Muscle in the Regenerating Limb of the Newt Triturus
title_short DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION : I. Cytological and Cytochemical Studies on the Neuromuscular Junction of Differentiating Muscle in the Regenerating Limb of the Newt Triturus
title_sort development of the neuromuscular junction : i. cytological and cytochemical studies on the neuromuscular junction of differentiating muscle in the regenerating limb of the newt triturus
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2107686/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5792331
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