Abstract

The features of unlesioned and lesioned trochlear nerves of goldfish have been examined electron microscopically. Lesioned nerves were studied between 1 and 107 days after cutting or crushing the nerve. Unlesioned nerves contained, on average, 77 myelinated axons and 19 unmyelinated axons. The latter were found in 1-2 fascicles per nerve. A basal lamina surrounded each myelinated axon and fascicle of unmyelinated axons. The numbers of myelinated axons, fascicles of unmyelinated axons and basal laminae varied by less than 5% over the intraorbital extramuscular segment of the nerve. Following interruption of the nerve, by either cutting or crushing, all of the axons and their myelin sheaths began to degenerate by 4 days in the distal nerve-stump. Both abnormally electron-dense and electron-lucent axons were observed. Both Schwann cells and macrophages appeared to phagocytose the myelin sheaths. Following a lesion, the Schwann cells and their basal laminae persisted in the distal nerve-stump. In crushed nerves, the basal laminae surrounding myelinated axons formed 97%, on average, of the Schwann tubes in the distal stump. The perimeters of the basal laminae were of similar size to those in the proximal stump, at least for the first 8 days after crush. In crushed nerves, single myelinated axons in the proximal nerve-stump gave rise to multiple sprouts, some of which reached the site of crush by 2 days, the distal stump by 4 days and the superior oblique muscle by 8 days. The regeneration of the unmyelinated axons was not examined. In both crushed and transected nerves, nearly all of the sprouts in the proximal and distal stumps were found within the basal laminae of Schwann cells, even though the spouts were disorganized in the transected region where there were no basal laminae. The growth cones of the regenerating axons were always found apposed to the inner surface of the basal laminae, which may have provided an adhesive substrate that directed their growth. Terminal sprouts from the ends of myelinated axons in the proximal stump accounted for the majority of the regenerating axons in the distal stump, as only a few collateral sprouts were found in the proximal stump, and only a small amount of axonal branching was found within the distal stump itself. The largest axons in the distal stump were remyelinated first, and the number of remyelinated axons increased progressively between 8 and 31 days after crush, at which time there were about twice as many as in unlesioned nerves.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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