Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 11, 4003-4014, Copyright © 1991 by Society for Neuroscience
Myelin sheath survival following axonal degeneration in doubly myelinated nerve fibers
GJ Kidd and JW Heath
Neuroscience Group, Faculty of Medicine, University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia.
Axonal contact plays a critical role in initiating myelin formation by
Schwann cells. However, recent studies of "double myelination" have
indicated that myelin maintenance continues in Schwann cells completely
displaced from physical contact with the axon. This raises the possibility
either that diffusible trophic factors are produced by the axon, or that
the axon is not required for myelin maintenance by these displaced Schwann
cells. To test these hypotheses, the axons involved in double myelination
in the mouse superior cervical ganglion (SCG) were transected surgically by
a transganglionic lesion. The inferior pole of the SCG was resected to
limit axonal regeneration. This method produced a typical Wallerian pattern
of degeneration in the superior pole, without compromising the blood supply
or introducing nonspecific trauma. EM analysis at 1 and 5 d postoperatively
showed that initially the axon degenerated, followed by breakdown of the
inner myelin sheath. In those configurations where the outer Schwann cell
was only partly displaced from the axon, the outer myelin sheath
degenerated simultaneously. However, in completely displaced internodes the
outer sheath survived degeneration of the axon and inner sheath. Outer
internodes remained intact for at least 5 weeks after transection (the
longest time point in this study), at which time they enclosed reorganized
processes of the inner Schwann cells, their basal lamina, and numerous
collagen fibrils. Axonal regeneration within surviving outer internodes was
rare and was characterized by the development of typical Remak ensheathment
by the inner Schwann cells. We conclude that in the mouse SCG, myelin
maintenance does not depend on the continued presence of the axon. These
data suggest further that myelin breakdown in Wallerian degeneration may be
initiated by mechanisms other than absence of a viable axon.