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Succinate dehydrogenase activity and soma size of motoneurons innervating different portions of the rat tibialis anteriorThe spatial distribution, soma size and oxidative enzyme activity of gamma and alpha motoneurons innervating muscle fibres in the deep (away from the surface of the muscle) and superficial (close to the surface of the muscle) portions of the tibialis anterior in normal rats were determined. The deep portion had a higher percentage of high oxidative fibres than the superficial portion of the muscle. Motoneurons were labelled by retrograde neuronal transport of fluorescent tracers: Fast Blue and Nuclear Yellow were injected into the deep portion and Nuclear Yellow into the superficial portion of the muscle. Therefore, motoneurons innervating the deep portion were identified by both a blue fluorescent cytoplasm and a golden-yellow fluorescent nucleus, while motoneurons innervating the superficial portion were identified by only a golden-yellow fluorescent nucleus. After staining for succinate dehydrogenase activity on the same section used for the identification of the motoneurons, soma size and succinate dehydrogenase activity of the motoneurons were measured. The gamma and alpha motoneurons innervating both the deep and superficial portions were located primarily at L4 and were intermingled within the same region of the dorsolateral portion of the ventral horn in the spinal cord. Mean soma size was similar for either gamma or alpha motoneurons in the two portions of the muscle. The alpha motoneurons innervating the superficial portion had a lower mean succinate dehydrogenase activity than those innervating the deep portion of the muscle. An inverse relationship between soma size and succinate dehydrogenase activity of alpha, but not gamma, motoneurons innervating both the deep and superficial portions was observed. Based on three-dimensional reconstructions within the spinal cord, there were no apparent differences in the spatial distribution of the motoneurons, either gamma or alpha, associated with the deep and superficial compartments of the muscle. The data provide evidence for an interdependence in the oxidative capacity between a motoneuron and its target muscle fibres in two subpopulations of motoneurons from the same motor pool, i.e. the same muscle.
Document ID
20050000132
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Ishihara, A.
(University of California Los Angeles 90095, United States)
Roy, R. R.
Edgerton, V. R.
Date Acquired
August 22, 2013
Publication Date
October 1, 1995
Publication Information
Publication: Neuroscience
Volume: 68
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0306-4522
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NS16333
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
NASA Discipline Musculoskeletal
Non-NASA Center

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