Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 8, 2289-2302, Copyright © 1988 by Society for Neuroscience
Nonregenerative axonal growth within the mature mammalian brain: ultrastructural identification of sympathohippocampal sprouts
KA Crutcher and CF Marfurt
Department of Anatomy, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City.
Damage to septohippocampal neurons in the adult rat results in sprouting of
sympathetic axons into the denervated hippocampal formation. However, the
distribution of sympathohippocampal fibers has only been assessed with
light microscopic techniques, and it is not known if the sprouted fibers
leave the blood vessels, along which they migrate into the hippocampal
formation, to enter the hippocampal neuropil and, if they do, whether they
form synaptic contacts with central neurons. Using the tetramethylbenzidine
technique to visualize anterogradely transported wheat germ
agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase conjugate, we identified sprouted
sympathetic fibers in the hippocampal formation at both the light and
electron microscopic level in albino rats receiving medial septal lesions.
The majority of labeled fibers were observed within the regions immediately
above and below the granule cell layer. Although most of the labeled
sprouts were observed in association with intraparenchymal blood vessels,
where they were usually apposed to the basal lamina, approximately a third
of the labeled profiles were present within the neuropil with no obvious
vascular relationships. Most of the profiles were identified as
unmyelinated axons or vesicle-filled varicosities. Many of the latter
structures contained small dense-cored vesicles, but in our sample none of
the labeled profiles were observed to form membrane specializations with
adjacent structures, and many were partly surrounded by presumed astrocytic
processes. These results document the invasion of the CNS by sprouting
axons of peripheral origin indicating that axonal elongation from uninjured
neurons can occur within the mature mammalian CNS under certain
circumstances. In addition, the presence of significant numbers of
sympathetic fibers within the hippocampal neuropil indicates that they may
be in a strategic position to influence hippocampal function.