Abstract

Fetal parietal cerebral cortex was homologously transplanted to the anterior chambers of the eyes of adult rats. The transplants got vascularized, proliferated, as measured by in vivo stereoscopic inspections, and differentiated into brain tissue similar to cortex cerebri in situ and survived for long times, greater than 41/2 months. Fibers from the intact sympathetic adrenergic ground plexus of the iris were able to innervate the transplants in an organotypic way regarding fluorescence morphology, pattern of distribution of the nerve terminals and, to a certain extent, density of innervation, the only variable parameter being density of innervation. Thus, in unpretreated or MAO inhibited transplants only rather few to scattered terminals could be found, while after preincubation in 10(-5)M alpha-methyl-noradrenaline the number of visible terminals was normal or slightly less than normal, as compared to cortex cerebri in situ. When superior cervical ganglia (SCG) were transplanted together with fetal cortex tissue to sympathetically denervated eyes the ingrowth in the cortex tissue was similar to that after single cortex transplantation combined with 5 day old SCG, while a marked hyperinnervation was encountered when combined with adult SCG. It is concluded that the developing cortex cerebri, deprived of its normal CNS source of adrenergic nerves, is able to receive sympathetic adrenergic nerves from the iris in an organotypic way upon transplantation to the anterior chamber of the eye.

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