Abstract

This study compares the growth and myelination of those parts of cervical ventral motoneurone axons in the spinal cord (the intramedullary segments) and in the ventral roots of fetal and young rats (up to 21 days postnatal). The same fibre bundles are examined centrally and peripherally. Myelination begins centrally and peripherally at about birth. However, the peripheral segments of some fibres may begin to become myelinated before the central. Over the first 3 weeks after birth the minimum circumference of peripheral segments of myelinated axons remains relatively constant at 3 μm but that of central segments falls from 2.5 μm to just over 1 μm. Axons within the same fibre bundles tend to be thinner and less heavily myelinated centrally than peripherally. With ageing, axon circumference becomes more strongly correlated with sheath thickness. The thickness of the sheath surrounding an axon of a given circumference does not differ statistically from one age to another or between central and peripheral segments. Studies of myelin sheath growth rate show that in the early stages glial and Schwann cells vary independently of one another in the rates at which they add new turns to sheaths around central and peripheral segments of axons in the same bundles.

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