Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 7, 1911-1918, Copyright © 1987 by Society for Neuroscience
Cell death during gangliogenesis in the leech: competition leading to the death of PMS neurons has both random and nonrandom components
ER Macagno and RR Stewart
The posteromedial, serotonin-containing (PMS) neurons are found in the
ventral aspect of certain anterior segmental ganglia of adult leeches. With
one exception, these cells are unpaired in all the ganglia where they are
found. During early embryogenesis in Hirudo medicinalis, however, a
bilateral pair of PMS neurons appears and differentiates in each of the 21
segmental ganglia (SG1-SG21). Over the next several days, one of the pair
dies in SG3-SG21. Examination of the PMS neuron in any one of these
segments reveals that either the right or the left cell remains, with equal
probability, suggesting that the elimination of one of the pair is a random
process. When unpaired PMS neurons are examined in pairs of adjacent
ganglia, however, the cells are from opposite sides in the majority of
cases (approximately 88%). This observation implies that the death of a PMS
neuron in 1 ganglion strongly biases which member of the pair of PMS
neurons degenerates in adjacent ganglia. Detailed examination of the
sequence of degeneration shows that it begins at several separate loci in
the nerve cord. We propose that the mechanism responsible for the death of
one of the pair of PMS neurons in a segmental ganglion is competition
between these 2 cells for some trophic factor, but that the outcome of this
competition is predetermined if one of the PMS neurons in an adjacent
ganglion has already begun to degenerate.