Abstract

The postnatal development of dendrite anatomy in α-motoneurons intracellularly labeled with horseradish peroxidase (HRP), innervating the intrinsic muscles of the sole of the foot (IFS MNs) in the cat, was investigated. The number of dendrites per neuron was about 11 and did not change from birth to adult. The number of branches per dendrite decreased during the same period by 20–25%. The net elimination of dendritic branches appearedto occur at distal branching points, as revealed by topological analysis. The dendritic branching pattern tended to be asymmetric at birth and the net decrease in dendritic branching postnatally did not alter this pattern. The length of preterminal branches (PTB) increased by a factor of 2, while terminal branch (TB) length increased by a factor of 3.3 postnatally. The large increase in TB length was attributed to both longitudinal growth and an apparent lengthening caused by resorption of distal branches during development. Dendritic length in the transverse spinal cord plane increased in parallel with the overall growth of the parent spinal cord segment, while dendritic growth along the rostro-caudal axis exceeded, by about one order of magnitude, dendritic growth in the transverse plane. Average branch diameter doubled from birth to adult. The decrease in branch diameter across branching points did not obey satisfactorily to the ‘power rule’ of Rall. However, the 1.5 power ratio of daughters-to-parents branch dropped from 1.18 to 1.08 between 3 weeks of age and adult. Tapering was evident in both PTBs and TBs. The rate of taper did not change postnatally. From birth onwards, ‘local’ branch diameter correlated closely with amount of membrane area and combined length of the dendritic branches located distal to the ‘supporting’ parent branch. These relations were similar in all age groups and are suggested to be properties intrinsic to the IFS MNs. The local branch diameter also co-varied with the number of distal dendritic branches, but in this case there was a systematic shift in the relationship with increasing postnatal age. It appears that the local diameter in IFS MN dendrites is a key indicator of the size of the distal dendritic arborization.

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