Literature DB >> 3652976

Formation of primary and secondary myotubes in rat lumbrical muscles.

J J Ross1, M J Duxson, A J Harris.   

Abstract

Numbers of myoblasts, primary myotubes and secondary myotubes in developing rat embryo hindlimb IVth lumbrical muscles were counted at daily intervals up until the time of birth, using electron microscopy. Motoneurone death at the spinal cord level supplying the lumbricals was assessed by counting axons in the 4th lumbar ventral root. Death of the motoneurones that supply the intrinsic muscles of the hindfoot was monitored by comparing the timecourse of development of total muscle choline acetyltransferase activity in control embryos with that in embryos where motoneurone death was inhibited by chronic paralysis with TTX, and by counting axons in the mixed nerve trunks at the level of the ankle at daily intervals. Condensations of undifferentiated cells marking the site of formation of the muscle were seen on embryonic day 15 (E15). Primary myotubes began to appear on E16 and reached a stable number (102 +/- 4) by E17. Secondary myotubes first appeared two days later, on E19, and numbered 280 at the time of birth (E22). The adult total of about 1000 muscle fibres, derived from both primary and secondary myotubes, was reached at postnatal day 7 (PN7) so considerable generation of secondary myotubes occurred after birth. There was a linear correlation between the number of undifferentiated mononucleate cells in a muscle and the rate of formation of secondary myotubes. The major period of motoneurone death in lumbar spinal cord was during E16-E17, when axon numbers in the L4 ventral root fell from 12,000 to 4000, but a discontinuity in the curve of muscle ChAT activity versus time indicated that death in the lumbrical motor pool occurred during E17-E19, after all primary myotubes had formed and before generation of secondary myotubes began. We suggest that motoneurone death, by regulating the final size of the motoneurone pool, regulates the ratio of secondary to primary myotube numbers in a muscle.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3652976     DOI: 10.1242/dev.100.3.383

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Development        ISSN: 0950-1991            Impact factor:   6.868


  18 in total

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4.  A warning against revival of the classic tenets of gross anatomy related to nerve-muscle specificity.

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8.  Early stages of myogenesis in a large mammal: formation of successive generations of myotubes in sheep tibialis cranialis muscle.

Authors:  S J Wilson; J C McEwan; P W Sheard; A J Harris
Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil       Date:  1992-10       Impact factor: 2.698

9.  Motor units of the fourth deep lumbrical muscle of the adult rat: isometric contractions and fibre type compositions.

Authors:  H J Gates; R M Ridge; A Rowlerson
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