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Distribution and morphology of motoneurons innervating different muscle fiber types in an amphibian muscle complex
Author(s) -
Kim Jungnim,
Hetherington Thomas E.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
journal of morphology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.652
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1097-4687
pISSN - 0362-2525
DOI - 10.1002/jmor.1052160308
Subject(s) - biology , amphibian , muscle fibre , morphology (biology) , distribution (mathematics) , anatomy , evolutionary biology , neuroscience , zoology , ecology , skeletal muscle , mathematical analysis , mathematics
The distribution and morphology of motoneurons innervating specific types of muscle fibers in the levator scapulae superior (LSS) muscle complex of the bullfrog ( Rana catesbeiana ) and tiger salamander ( Ambystoma tigrinum ) were studied by retrograde labelling with cholera toxin‐conjugated horseradish peroxidase (CT‐HRP). The LSS muscle complex in both of these amphibians has a segregated pattern of muscle‐fiber types (tonic; fast oxidative‐glycolytic twitch [FOG]; fast glycolytic twitch [FG]) along an anteroposterior axis. The entire motor pool was labelled by injection of CT‐HRP into the whole LSS muscle complex. The motoneurons innervating specific fiber types were labelled by injection of CT‐HRP into certain muscle regions. The organization of the motoneuron pool of the LSS complex of both species was arranged in two columns—one ventrolateral and one medial. In bullfrogs, the ventrolateral column contains motoneurons innervating FG and tonic fiber types and the medial column contains motoneurons innervating FOG fiber types. In tiger salamanders, the ventrolateral column contains motoneurons innervating FG fiber types and the medial column contains motoneurons innervating FOG and tonic fiber types. The different motoneuron types also have different soma sizes and patterns of dendritic arborization. In both species, FG motoneurons are the largest, whereas FOG motoneurons are intermediate in size and tonic motoneurons are the smallest. In bullfrogs, the main dendrites of FG motoneurons extend into the dorsolateral and the ventrolateral gray matter of the spinal cord, whereas the dendrites of FOG motoneurons extend into the ventral and medial cord. In the tiger salamander, dendrites of FG motoneurons extend into the ventrolateral spinal cord and dendrites of the FOG motoneurons extend more generally into the ventral cord. Dendrites of tonic motoneurons in both amphibians were small and short, and difficult to observe. These results establish that motoneurons innervating different types of muscle fibers in the LSS muscle complex are segregated spatially and display consistent morphological differences. © 1993 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.