Postnatal development of the rat dorsal funiculus
Open Access
- 1 April 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 7 (4), 972-977
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.07-04-00972.1987
Abstract
The present study shows that there are approximately 21,000 axons in the neonatal rat dorsal funiculus, as compared to 26,000 in 2-week-old animals. We attribute this increase primarily to arriving corticospinal fibers. In adult animals, however, there are approximately 15,000 axons. This is a decline of 58% from the 2 week level, and the decrease is proportionately similar in the corticospinal area and the dorsal funiculus proper. Thus, axon numbers decline in later postnatal development, and since the decline seems to be well past the time of the histogenetic death of the cells that give rise to these axons, we propose that the loss is not caused by the death of neurons. This is further evidence that a reduction in axon numbers not accompanied by cell death is a widespread phenomenon in mammalian postnatal neural development. We infer that the mechanism of axon loss is a reduction in axon branching and that its function is to sharpen synaptic connections.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neuron numbers in the superior cervical sympathetic ganglion of the rat: a critical comparison of methods for cell countingJournal of Neurocytology, 1983
- Overproduction and Elimination of Retinal Axons in the Fetal Rhesus MonkeyScience, 1983
- Quantitation of propriospinal fibers in the tract of lissauer of the ratJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1982
- Growth and target finding by axons of the corticospinal tract in prenatal and postnatal ratsNeuroscience, 1982
- Development of the pyramidal tract in the hamster. II. An electron microscopic studyJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1982
- Evidence that the early postnatal restriction of the cells of origin of the callosal projection is due to the elimination of axonal collaterals rather than to the death of neuronsDevelopmental Brain Research, 1981
- Neurogenesis in the trigeminal ganglion of the albino rat: A quantitative autoradiographic studyJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1981
- The postnatal development of large light and small dark neurons in mouse dorsal root ganglia: a statistical analysis of cell numbers and sizeJournal of Neurocytology, 1979
- NEURONAL NUMBERS IN SUPERIOR CERVICAL GANGLION OF NEONATAL RAT1978
- Morphometric analysis of rat superior cervical ganglion after axotomy and nerve growth factor treatmentJournal of Neurocytology, 1976