Abstract
We have investigated the capacity of injured axons in the spinal dorsal columns of young adult rats to reinnervate grafted Pacinian corpuscles. A branch of the hindlimb interosseous nerve with a group of crural Pacinian corpuscles attached to it was autotransplanted to the surface of the spinal cord and the nerve stump was implanted into the dorsal column. Two to three months later 16 grafts were removed for examination by light and electron microscopy. By 3 months after transplantation almost all Schwann cell columns of the grafted nerve branch were occupied by regenerated myelinated and unmyelinated axons. Of 41 corpuscles examined by electron microscopy 24 were reinnervated by 1-3 myelinated fibres which gave rise to multiple terminals in the inner core. The remaining corpuscles appeared to be denervated. Only two of the reinnervated corpuscles contained regenerated endings which reiterated the distinct ultrastructure of normal presynaptic terminals of CNS axons, characterized by clusters of lucent vesicles and paramembranous densities. All other corpuscles were reinnervated by terminals which resembled peripheral mechanosensory endings as they contained mitochondria and very few vesicles. One such corpuscle was coinnervated by small terminals filled with large dense cored vesicles. We assume that the majority of grafted Pacinian corpuscles have been reinnervated by dorsal column axons and that the regenerated terminals with the ultrastructure of peripheral mechanosensory endings derive from central axons of primary sensory neurons, which are apparently capable of constructing mechanosensory-like terminals in response to signals from the Pacinian corpuscles. The vesicle-filled endings are probably formed by second order sensory neurons, corticospinal neurons and small peptidergic neurons unable to adjust their terminals to the new target.
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