Abstract

The projection patterns of regenerating spinal axons in the larval sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) were determined by intracellular injection of HRP. Four hundred and eighty-six of 562 stained axons and axon-like neurites (87%) arising from Muller and Mauthner axons, giant interneurons, and dorsal cells terminated in an orientation similar to that of their counterpart control cells. Therefore, lamprey spinal axons regenerate selectively along their normal projection paths. During the first 4 weeks of recovery, i.e., before any had regenerated beyond the transection site, 91 of 114 axons and long neurites (80%) projected in the proper direction. Thus, the correctness of the final projection patterns did not result from selective retraction of randomly directed long neurites. When the cords were doubly transected 1 cm apart, orientation of regenerating neurites remained normal both within the 1 cm island and in the adjacent spinal cord. This suggests that the directional specificity of axonal regeneration was determined neither by the location of the scar nor by the availability of channels formed by the degenerating fibers. Finally, removing 1 cm of spinal cord eliminated potential synaptic targets for regenerating axons on either side of the lesion, but did not affect the direction of axonal growth. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that the regeneration of lamprey spinal axons is guided by local chemical cues that persist long after the pathways are formed early in development.

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