D. Crespo et al., DIMORPHIC MYELIN IN THE RAT OPTIC-NERVE AS A RESULT OF RETINAL ACTIVITY BLOCKAGE BY TETRODOTOXIN DURING EARLY POSTNATAL-PERIOD, Histology and histopathology, 10(2), 1995, pp. 289-299
The effects of the retinal ganglion cell (RGC) activity blockage on th
e early myelination of the rat optic nerve (ON) were investigated at t
he light and ultrastructural levels, The blockage of the RGC action po
tential was attained by the use of tetrodotoxin (TTX), a blocker of th
e voltage-sensitive sodium channels. TTX was either infused directly i
nto the left eye (TON) or injected systematically (SON). These two gro
ups of ONs were compared with the untreated paired right nerves (UON)
of the eye-infused group. Our observations showed that the general mor
phology of the ONs in either treated group was similar to that of the
UONs. The most noticeable ultrastructural feature of these nerves was
the presence of dimorphic myelin sheaths in 4% of the myelinated fibre
s (MFs) in the TON group at postnatal day twelve, while they were seld
om observed in the other groups (0.5%). These abnormal covers were of
two types; long flaps of aberrant myelin or redundant myelin profiles.
However, at postnatal day seven, the onset of myelination and the per
centage of MFs was similar in the three groups. The morphometric resul
ts showed that there were no age-group differences in axon size in unm
yelinated and MFs. These results suggest that while the bioelectrical
activity of the RGCs could not play any role in maintaining axon calib
re it may, to some extent, regulate the process of formation of normal
myelin sheaths in the rat ON.