Abstract

In view of recent evidence that nerves may be involved in bone formation, the present study examines the local occurrence of axons at the onset of secondary ossification center formation in the knee region of developing rats. Radiographic and histological examination showed that secondary ossification center formation commenced at day 10. At day 15 the epiphyseal ossification had reached a relatively mature state. As seen by light microscopy, cartilage canals first appeared at day 5, reaching the epiphyseal center by day 9. Axons exhibiting a neurofilament-like immunoreactivity emerged from the perichondrial plexa into the cartilage canals. Many calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-immunoreactive axons were found in the canals, as well as in the perichondrium. Axons with tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity were not found in the canals, but such fibers occurred in relation to blood vessels at other sites. The canal-related axons disappeared between days 13 and 15, and the canals themselves did not persist beyond bone formation. As seen in the electron microscope, an individual canal contained 3-10 unmyelinated Schwann cell-enclosed axons with diameters of 0.1-2.0 microM. These observations show that putative sensory unmyelinated axons with CGRP-and SP-like immunoreactivity are transiently present during initiation of bone formation in developing epiphyses. Whether there is a causal relation between transient innervation and osteogenesis remains to be determined.

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