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Synaptogenesis in the brachial and lumbosacral enlargements of the spinal cord in the postnatal opossum,Monodelphis domestica
22
Citations
27
References
1999
Year
General GradientsCellular NeurobiologySocial SciencesEmbryologySynapsidaNeuroregenerationElectron MicroscopyExperimental NeuropathologyNeurologySynaptogenesisMorphogenesisEmbryonic DevelopmentNervous SystemBiologyDevelopmental BiologyNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyMonodelphis DomesticaOntogenyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicinePostnatal Opossum
Synaptic proteins were localized in light microscopy on sections of the brachial and lumbosacral enlargements of the spinal cord of postnatal opossums, Monodelphis domestica, to determine whether their expression correlates with the development of major motor pathways and simple motor behaviors. The tissues were fixed, cryoprotected, frozen, cut in 15-micrometer sections, and processed immunohistochemically using antibodies against synaptophysin, synaptotagmin-I, or SNAP-25. Immunolabeling was observed in the presumptive white matter before the presumptive gray matter, suggesting that the proteins are evidenced in growing axons before the onset of synaptogenesis, and it was observed in presumed propriospinal axons before most presumed descending axons of supraspinal origin. In the newborn opossum, the immunolabeling was scant in the gray matter and was limited to the periphery of the ventral horn, and indeed few synapses were seen in electron microscopy in nonexperimental material. Labeling increased in intensity and spread throughout the gray matter until 5-7 weeks, when it was no longer found in the white matter and resembled the adult pattern of labeling. Considering the location and relative intensity of the immunolabeling for the three proteins over time in the two enlargements, synaptogenesis occurs according to three general gradients: rostrocaudal, ventrodorsal, and lateromedial. These gradients match those of spinal cord and limb development, and of the growth of descending axons into the cord. Synaptogenesis is most intense when the spinal sensorimotor reflexes begin to be expressed.
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