Abstract

The relationship between the size and shape of regenerative outgrowth and the quantity of innervation was studied in adult Xenopus laevis. The forelimbs, of which the nerve supply was artificially altered, were amputated midway through the stylopodium and were kept for 1 year. The regenerative outgrowths that formed in normal limbs with an intact nerve supply were mainly spike-shaped and occasionally rod-shaped. However, when the nerve supply to the distal part of the forelimb was augmented by surgically diverting ipsilateral sciatic nerve bundles, the quantity of innervation was increased to about two and a half times that of the normal limb. These hyperinnervated outgrowths were somewhat larger than those of the normally innervated outgrowths and the majority of them were oar-shaped, a type hardly ever encountered in normal regeneration. In contrast, when partial denervation was performed concomitantly with limb amputation, by ablation of the N. radialis at the shoulder joint, the quantity of innervation decreased to about one half that of the normal limb. The outgrowths obtained were spike-shaped in all cases, with their size being about half that of the normally innervated outgrowths. Furthermore, when both the N. radialis and N. ulnaris were ablated in the same way, the amputated limbs were mostly non-regenerative, but some of them regenerated small conical outgrowths. Based on these results, a discussion is presented concerning the relationship between a regenerative outgrowth and the innervation of the forelimb in Xenopus.

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