Abstract

Inherited muscular dystrophy of the chicken is thought to arise from abnormal development of trophic regulation of skeletal muscles by their innervating nerves. To determine whether expression of muscular dystrophy in the chicken is a property of the nerves or of the muscles, wing limb buds were transplanted between normal and dystrophic chick embryos at 3 1 2 days of incubation (stage 19–20). Muscles of donor limbs innervated by nerves of the hosts were compared to contralateral unoperated host limb muscles in chicks from 6 to 25 weeks after hatching. Expression of normal or dystrophic phenotype was determined by examination of five different properties which are altered in dystrophic chick muscle: electromyographic evidence of myotonia; fiber diameter; acetylcholinesterase activity, localization, and isozymes; lactic dehydrogenase activity; and succinic dehydrogenase activity. Genetically normal muscle innervated by nerves of normal or dystrophic hosts was phenotypically normal while genetically dystrophic muscle innervated by normal nerves was phenotypically dystrophic. The results suggest that inherited muscular dystrophy of the chicken arises from a defect of muscle rather than from a lesion in the nerves themselves.

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