Literature DB >> 7532705

Target regulation of a motor neuron-specific epitope.

E W Chen1, S Loera, A Y Chiu.   

Abstract

In the adult rat nervous system, motor neurons are recognized specifically by a monoclonal antibody, MO-1. Because binding by MO-1 is lost following axotomy, contact with the target may regulate this motor neuron-specific epitope. To test this hypothesis, we examined the recovery of MO-1 immunoreactivity in hypoglossal neurons following unilateral damage to the hypoglossal nerve. During the first week following nerve crush, neurons in the ipsilateral hypoglossal nucleus lost all immunoreactivity for MO-1. Antibody binding returned with time, and by 4 weeks, 80% of the injured neurons had recovered the MO-1 epitope. Since motor neurons reinnervate their original targets readily following nerve crush, it appears that MO-1 binding is recovered when motor neurons return to their original target muscles in the tongue. When the hypoglossal nerve was cut and inserted into a foreign muscle nearby (the sternomastoid muscle), the MO-1 epitope was not detected in the injured neurons, even when examined 6 weeks after surgery. However, if the sternomastoid muscle was denervated prior to insertion of the hypoglossal nerve, thus allowing the hypoglossal nerve to synapse with this foreign target, increasing numbers of hypoglossal neurons reacquired MO-1 immunoreactivity with time. Our results suggest that the MO-1 epitope is only expressed in motor neurons that are in synaptic contact with skeletal muscle. Thus, a property that distinguishes mature motor neurons from other neuronal phenotypes appears to be regulated by direct synaptic interaction with the postsynaptic target.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7532705      PMCID: PMC6577837     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  2 in total

1.  Sprouting and connectivity of embryonic leech heart excitor (HE) motor neurons in the absence of their peripheral target.

Authors:  J Jellies; D M Kopp
Journal:  Invert Neurosci       Date:  1995

2.  Axotomy-induced loss of m2 muscarinic receptor mRNA in the rat facial motor nucleus precedes a decrease in concentration of muscarinic receptors.

Authors:  D B Hoover; R H Baisden; J V Lewis
Journal:  Histochem J       Date:  1996-11
  2 in total

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