Gm. Ohanlon et Mb. Lowrie, NEONATAL NERVE INJURY CAUSES LONG-TERM CHANGES IN GROWTH AND DISTRIBUTION OF MOTONEURON DENDRITES IN THE RAT, Neuroscience, 56(2), 1993, pp. 453-464
Disruption of neuromuscular contact by nerve-crush during the early po
stnatal period results in the death of a large proportion of affected
motoneurons. Increased activity and abnormal reflex responses are evid
ent in those that survive. We have studied the aberrant dendritic morp
hology of surviving cells and have attempted to correlate the observed
alterations in morphology with the above experimental findings. Moton
eurons supplying the extensor hallucis longus muscles of the rat were
retrogradely labelled with cholera toxin subunit-B conjugated to horse
radish peroxidase. The dendritic tree of labelled cells was analysed i
n adult animals having undergone unilateral sciatic nerve-crush at bir
th. Unoperated control animals were also examined. Following nerve-cru
sh at birth, total visible dendritic length was more than 30% smaller
than control cells in the transverse plane. This decrease was confined
largely to the medially directed segments of the dendritic field and
appeared to be due to a reduction in dendritic branching combined with
a failure to achieve the correct branch length. There was no overall
change in total visible dendritic length in the longitudinal plane, bu
t a reorientation of dendrites in favour of rostrodorsal regions was o
bserved. There was no alteration in dendritic length in cells contrala
teral to the nerve injury. These results show that nerve injury during
early postnatal development produces lasting changes in the distribut
ion of motoneuron dendrites. The localized nature of these changes may
explain the altered activity and induced death of motoneurons seen af
ter neonatal nerve-crush.