Development of the spinal nerves in the lamprey: II. Outflows from the spinal cord
- PMID: 3571510
- DOI: 10.1002/cne.902560305
Development of the spinal nerves in the lamprey: II. Outflows from the spinal cord
Abstract
During a series of studies on the development of spinal nerves in the tail of larval lampreys (13 mm, 26 days), Lampetra japonica, we observed outflows of cytoplasmic processes (cytoplasmic outflow) or whole cell bodies (cellular outflow) from the neural tube or from the cord. Three types were distinguished according to their site of exit from the surface of the neuraxis. The dorsal outflow (DO) is the cellular outflow seen on the midsagittal surface of the dorsal wall of the caudalmost region of the neural tube, just rostral or caudal to the opening in the dorsal tube wall. It is hypothesized that the cells from the dorsal neural tube become polymorphous cells scattered in the extramedullar space. The dorsolateral outflow (DLO) is the cytoplasmic outflow emerging from the dorsolateral aspect of the spinal cord at the intermyotome level. DLO fibers are non-myelinated fibers arising from the dorsolateral tract (DLT) and, after piercing the basal lamina and the glia limitans, run in the myosepta laterally to spread along the deep surface of the dermis. DLO fibers terminate in two different ways: those of one group pierce the dermis and the basal lamina to end as intraepidermal free endings that contain aggregates of clear vesicles, and those of the other group form varicosities that lie within depressions on the lateral cell surface of myotomes. DLO fibers in the extramedullary space characteristically lack any sheaths, including the basal lamina. The ventrolateral outflow (VLO) represents primitive ventral roots consisting of both the cytoplasmic and the cellular outflows: the former shows the axonal outgrowth from primitive somatomotor neurons, and the latter is represented by elongated cells derived from the glia limitans, extending along the axonal processes to form the Schwann cell sheath around the proximal portion of the ventral root axons. The basal lamina covering the cord does not extend along the VLO fibers. The developing ventral root contains axons at different stages of differentiation. Some axons end on the medial surface of the myotome at the midsegmental level to form neuromuscular junctions. However, axonal processes of primitive motoneurons form close contacts with muscle cells by means of small cytoplasmic projections that contain no synaptic vesicles and lack the basal lamina interposed between them. The proposed sequence of development, based on stages in caudal to rostral sections, is the DO, the DLO, and then the VLO.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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