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Neuromuscular junctions in adult and developing fast and slow muscles
Authors:W H Kwong  G F Gauthier
Affiliation:Department of Anatomy, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester 01605.
Abstract:Functional changes that occur just before hatching in future fast muscles of the chicken are thought to be influenced by the pattern of innervation. We have compared the neuromuscular junctions of two fast muscles, the posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) and the pectoralis, which differ in their myosin composition at 18 days in ovo. We have also presented new information on the neuromuscular junctions of the adult fast muscles and an adult slow muscle, the anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD). Both categories of adult muscles were heterogeneous, and there was little difference between endplates of the two fast muscles or between the fast and slow muscles. In contrast, there were significant structural differences between the two fast muscles during embryonic development. In early embryonic muscle fibers, which synthesize embryonic forms of myosin, individual motor endplates were contacted by multiple axon terminals. At 18 days in ovo, the majority of the neuromuscular junctions in the pectoralis continued to be multiterminal, whereas all but one of the terminals had been withdrawn from each endplate in the PLD. This single terminal had a unique form that distinguished it from the embryonic pectoralis and also from the two adult muscles. By 7 days after hatching, the neuromuscular junctions of both muscles had single terminals. They were different from the embryonic terminals, though not necessarily equivalent to adult terminals. The results show that multiple terminals persist at 18 days in ovo in the muscle that continues to express an embryonic myosin, but they have been withdrawn from the muscle that has lost this myosin. It is concluded, from combined data on the two muscles, that maturation of the neuromuscular junction during embryonic and late posthatch development is correlated with transitions in the myosin pattern and in contractile properties.
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