Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 8, 3909-3919, Copyright © 1988 by Society for Neuroscience
Motor nerve terminal sprouting in formamide-treated inactive amphibian skeletal muscle
MM Wines and MS Letinsky
Department of Physiology, University of California, Los Angeles 90024- 1751.
Motor axons can form sprouts from their terminal arborizations in response
to partial denervation, and when exposed to pharmacological blocking agents
like TTX, botulinum toxins alpha-bungarotoxin, or curare. Each of these
experimental procedures has cessation of muscle contractile activity as a
common feature. We tested the specific role of muscle fiber inactivity in
regulating nerve terminal sprouting by chronically treating adult frog
(Rana pipiens) cutaneous pectoris muscles with formamide. Exposure to
formamide, unlike the other compounds used to study sprouting, selectively
inhibits muscle contractions without blocking pre- or postsynaptic
transmission or muscle fiber action potentials. Repeated formamide
applications were used to achieve chronic block of muscle contractile
activity in vivo for up to 6 weeks. Motor axons in formamide-treated
inactive muscle sprouted only from their terminal arborizations, but not
from nodes of Ranvier. The onset of this sprouting was protracted compared
with that seen in pharmacologically blocked mammalian muscles, and sprouts
in formamide-treated muscles were more complex and ornate. The frequency of
sprouting terminals was less in these formamide-treated muscles than that
seen after alternate methods of contractile block, and this suggests that
contractile inactivity alone serves as only a moderate cue for sprouting.
The possibility is discussed that the prolific sprouting seen following
neurotoxin administration may, in fact, be due to perturbations in synaptic
transmission or muscle electrical activity rather than muscle fiber
inactivity.