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Localization of motor neuron pools supplying identified muscles in normal and supernumerary legs of chick embryo.
Author(s) -
Margaret Hollyday,
Viktor Hamburger,
Juanita M. G. Farris
Publication year - 1977
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences of the united states of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.74.8.3582
Subject(s) - supernumerary , motor neuron , anatomy , biology , embryo , plexus , gastrocnemius muscle , neuron , neuroscience , spinal cord , skeletal muscle , microbiology and biotechnology
Neuromuscular specificity has been investigated in chick embryos with a grafted supernumerary leg. The nerves of the lumbar plexus are divided between the two legs so that rostral nerves innervate the grafted leg and the caudal nerves supply the host's original leg. The basic topographic organization of the histologically definable motor neuron clusters of the lateral motor columns remains unchanged by the addition of a supernumerary leg. Intramuscular injections of identified leg muscles have been used to map the intraspinal location of specific motor pools in stage 38 (12-day) embryos. In the normal embryo, the gastrocnemius muscle is innervated by neurons in a central dorsal cluster of motor neurons in segments 26-29. In six experimental cases, the motor neurons supplying the gastrocnemius muscle of a rostrally placed grafted leg were consistently located in a specific medial cluster of neurons in segments 23-25. Motor neurons in this location never normally innervate a gastrocnemius muscle, even in the very young embryos during the period of naturally occurring cell death. This observation of a systematic mismatch between a particular motor cluster and an abnormally innervated muscle indicates the operation of a selective developmental process. A hierarchy of selective chemoaffinities may best explain our experimental results.

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