Abstract
Muscle fibers degenerate and regenerate in response to contractile damage, during aging, and in various muscle diseases that weaken the fibers. It is known that degeneration and regeneration of the segment of the postsynaptic fiber produces dramatic alterations in the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) that forms on the regenerated fiber, but the mechanisms here are incompletely understood. We have used a laser microbeam to damage the postsynaptic fibers at individual NMJs in the sternomastoid muscle of living young adult mice and then followed the synapses vitally over time using fluorescent proteins expressed in motor neurons and glial cells and staining of postsynaptic acetylcholine receptors. We find, in contrast to previous reports, that the mouse nerve terminal retains contact with the synaptic basal lamina marked by cholinesterase staining even in the absence of the target, showing that this terminal does not require a continuous supply of target-derived molecules for its maintenance. Thus, remodeling of the nerve terminal during the period of target absence does not explain the subsequent changes in the new NMJ. Rather, we see that the synapse becomes altered as the new fiber segment regenerates. Mechanisms for remodeling the synapse include failure of the regenerating muscle fiber to contact the old basal lamina and nerve terminal, growth of the nerve terminal and its glia toward the regenerating fiber, and remodeling of the initial contact as the nerve terminal becomes varicose.
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