Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 9, 1490-1501, Copyright © 1989 by Society for Neuroscience
Cooperation and competition during development: neonatal lesioning of the superior cervical ganglion induces cell death of trigeminal neurons innervating the cerebral blood vessels but prevents the loss of axon collaterals from the neurons that survive
TP O'Connor and D van der Kooy
Department of Anatomy, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
In the adult rodent trigeminal ganglion there is a period of postnatal cell
death in the population of cells with axons innervating the middle cerebral
artery (O'Connor and van der Kooy, 1986b). The superior cervical ganglion
(SCG) also has a projection to the middle cerebral artery (MCA; Mayberg et
al., 1984; Cowen et al., 1986, 1987; present report). We hypothesized that
the trigeminal ganglion cells innervating the MCA may be competing with the
superior cervical projection for target area or for a target factor for
survival, and thus the removal of the superior cervical projection at birth
(sympathectomy) may promote the survival of some of the trigeminal-artery
innervating cells that normally would die. Multiple fluorescent retrograde
tracing was employed to analyze the postnatal development of the trigeminal
projection to the MCA in sympathectomized and sibling control rats. We
found that the SCG projection to the MCA exhibits a period of postnatal
cell death. The trigeminal ganglion projection exhibits axon degeneration
as well as postnatal cell death. Postnatal day 0 (P0) lesioning of the SCG
did not prevent cell death or axon loss in the trigeminal projection to the
cerebral artery. In fact, increased cell death of the trigeminal-artery
projecting neurons was observed in the lesioned animals when compared to
nonlesioned sibling controls. By P55, we found that 80% of these trigeminal
neurons had died in lesioned animals, compared with 50% in controls. In
both control and sympathectomized rats, close to 90% of the trigeminal
neurons innervating the artery in the neonate can no longer be retrogradely
labeled from the MCA by tracer applications at P25-90. Thus, although the
presence of an intact SCG may protect some trigeminal-artery projecting
neurons from cell death, it does not prevent axon retraction and does not
permit a larger absolute number of trigeminal axons to innervate the
arteries in the adult. Thus, separate mechanisms are responsible for the
survival of perikarya versus the retraction of their axons from the MCA.
Surprisingly, in the neonatally sympathectomized rats almost 20% of those
trigeminal cells that maintained a projection to the MCA at P90 also had a
projection to the forehead. In contrast, less than 3% of the artery
innervating trigeminal cells in the P90 control rats had an axon collateral
to the forehead.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)