Acetylcholine receptors in regenerating muscle accumulate at original synaptic sites in the absence of the nerve.
Open Access
- 1 August 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 82 (2), 412-425
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.82.2.412
Abstract
The role of nerve terminals in organizing acetylcholine receptors on regenerating skeletal muscle fibers [R. pipiens] was examined. When muscle fibers are damaged, they degenerate and are phagocytized, but their basal lamina sheaths survive. New myofibers form within the original basal lamina sheaths, and they become innervated precisely at the original synaptic sites on the sheaths. After denervating and damaging muscle, myofibers were allowed to regenerate but deliberately prevented reinnervation. The distribution of acetylcholine receptors on regenerating myofibers was determined by histological methods, using [125I].alpha.-bungarotoxin or horseradish peroxidase-.alpha.-bungarotoxin; original synaptic sites on the basal lamina sheaths were marked by cholinesterase stain. By 1 mo. after damage to the muscle, the new myofibers have accumulations of acetylcholine receptors that are selectively localized to the original synaptic sites. The density of the receptors at these sites is the same as at normal neuromuscular junctions. Folds in the myofiber surface resembling junctional folds at normal neuromuscular junctions also occur at original synaptic sites in the absence of nerve terminals. The biochemical and structural organization of the subsynaptic membrane in regenerating muscle is directed by structures that remain at synaptic sites after removal of the nerve.Keywords
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