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The Journal of Neuroscience, February 15, 2000, 20(4):1495-1504
Developmental Changes in the Transmitter Properties of
Sympathetic Neurons That Innervate the Periosteum
Stephen E.
Asmus,
Sarah
Parsons, and
Story C.
Landis
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
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ABSTRACT |
During the development of sweat gland innervation, interactions
with the target tissue induce a change from noradrenergic to
cholinergic and peptidergic properties. To determine whether the change
in neurotransmitter properties that occurs in the sweat gland
innervation occurs more generally in sympathetic neurons, we identified
a new target of cholinergic sympathetic neurons in rat, the periosteum,
which is the connective tissue covering of bone, and characterized the
development of periosteal innervation of the sternum. During
development, sympathetic axons grow from thoracic sympathetic ganglia
along rib periosteum to reach the sternum. All sympathetic axons
displayed catecholaminergic properties when they reached the sternum,
but these properties subsequently disappeared. Many axons lacked
detectable immunoreactivities for vesicular acetylcholine transporter
and vasoactive intestinal peptide when they reached the sternum
and acquired them after arrival. To determine whether periosteum could
direct changes in the neurotransmitter properties of sympathetic
neurons that innervate it, we transplanted periosteum to the hairy
skin, a noradrenergic sympathetic target. We found that the sympathetic innervation of the transplant underwent a noradrenergic to cholinergic and peptidergic change. These results suggest that periosteum, in
addition to sweat glands, regulates the neurotransmitter properties of
the sympathetic neurons that innervate it.
Key words:
cholinergic differentiation factor; neural crest; sweat
glands; synapse formation; neuropoietic cytokines; transmitter
plasticity; autonomic neurons
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INTRODUCTION |
Acquisition of the diverse array of
neurotransmitter phenotypes displayed by distinct neuron populations is
an important event in synapse development. Most neurons contain a small
molecule neurotransmitter and one or more neuropeptides, and each
neuron class expresses a characteristic complement of transmitter(s) and neuropeptides. Many neurons acquire the ability to produce a small
molecule transmitter before their axons reach targets and form
contacts. Ventral mesencephalic neurons contain tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH) before contacting striatum or limbic forebrain (Specht et al.,
1981 ), dividing sympathetic precursors contain catecholamines (Cochard
et al., 1979 ; Teitelman et al., 1979 ), and glutamic acid decarboxylase
is present in growth cones (Mclaughlin et al., 1975 ). Similarly,
neuropeptide expression can precede target contact. Sympathetic
precursors contain neuropeptide Y, and its expression is correctly
regulated in culture without target tissues (Tyrrell and Landis, 1994 ;
Hall and MacPhedran, 1995 ). Furthermore, retinal ganglion cells express
substance P independent of tectal interactions (Yamagata and Sanes,
1995 ). In some instances, target tissues influence neuropeptide
expression in developing neurons (Coulombe and Nishi, 1991 ; Horgan and
van der Kooy, 1992 ; Darland and Nishi, 1998 ). Target-derived
differentiation factors, however, play a key role in determining both
small molecule and neuropeptide transmitters in sympathetic neurons
innervating sweat glands. Initially, these neurons display
noradrenergic properties, whereas the mature innervation is cholinergic
and contains vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) (Landis and
Keefe, 1983 ; Leblanc and Landis, 1986 ; Landis et al., 1988 ). The
conversion is governed by sweat gland-derived factor(s) (Schotzinger
and Landis, 1988 ; Guidry and Landis, 1998b ).
The target-mediated specification of both a small molecule transmitter
and a neuropeptide in sweat gland neurons, although interesting, has
not been demonstrated in any other neuronal population, including other
sympathetic neurons. In vivo, cholinergic and VIP-containing
neurons are present in sympathetic ganglia innervating sweat glands
(Lundberg et al., 1979 ; Lindh, 1989 ; Morales et al., 1995 ). In
addition, neurons in thoracic sympathetic ganglia, which do not
innervate sweat glands, contain VIP (Lundberg et al., 1979 ; Kummer and
Heym, 1988 ). Because VIP is coexpressed with choline acetyltransferase
(ChAT) (Morales et al., 1995 ), we asked whether VIP-containing thoracic
neurons are cholinergic. Periosteum, the connective tissue covering of
bone, is a candidate target for cholinergic sympathetic innervation.
Adult periosteum contains VIP-immunoreactive fibers associated with
periosteum, as well as catecholaminergic fibers associated with blood
vessels (Hohmann et al., 1986 ; Hill and Elde, 1991 ). Tracing studies
indicate that periosteal VIP-IR fibers of the ribs and sternum
originate from thoracic sympathetic ganglia (Hohmann et al., 1986 ).
Using an antiserum recognizing vesicular acetylcholine transporter
(VAChT), we found that periosteum is a target of cholinergic sympathetic neurons. Analysis of developing innervation of the periosteum of sternum revealed that catecholaminergic properties were
uniformly present, whereas cholinergic properties and VIP were often
absent and appeared subsequently. Furthermore, VAChT and VIP were
induced in fibers innervating periosteum transplanted under hairy skin.
Together with studies of sweat gland innervation, these results suggest
a common mechanism regulating cholinergic phenotype in several
populations of sympathetic neurons and raise the possibility that
target instruction plays a role in neurotransmitter determination more generally.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals and surgery. Sprague Dawley rats (Zivic
Miller, Zelienople, PA) were used for analyses of periosteal
innervation in developing and adult rats, whereas inbred Lewis rats
(Charles River Laboratories, North Wilmington, MA) were used in the
transplantation experiments. No differences were observed in
transmitter-related properties of periosteal innervation of Sprague
Dawley and Lewis rats, and male and female rats of both strains were used.
Some neonatal rats were sympathectomized by intraperitoneal injections
on postnatal day 1 (P1) to P7 of 100 mg/kg 6-hydroxydopamine hydrobromide (6-OHDA) (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) dissolved in physiological saline containing 1 mg/ml ascorbic acid. Littermate control animals received injections of vehicle. Treated and control animals were perfused on P4 or as adults. Unfixed tissue was also removed and frozen
from rats at these same ages (P4: 6-OHDA-treated, n = 7, vehicle, n = 7; adults: 6-OHDA-treated,
n = 7, vehicle, n = 6).
To transplant periosteum under hairy skin, the sternum was removed from
P2 Lewis rats, and a rectangular segment of periosteal rudiment was
lifted off the sternum with a scalpel and transplanted under the skin
of P1 recipient animals. Recipients were anesthetized by hypothermia,
and a semicircular flap was cut in the skin of the lateral thorax. The
flap of skin was closed over the transplanted tissue and sealed with a
pyroxylin solution (New-Skin; Medtech Labs, Cody, WY). After the
New-Skin had dried, the pups were returned to their mother. Transplants
were examined at 1 (n = 6), 2 (n = 6),
4 (n = 7), or 6 (n = 7) weeks after
transplantation. Some pups receiving transplants also received
injections of 6-OHDA as described above. These were analyzed 2 (n = 3) or 6 (n = 2) weeks after
surgery. To control for the effects of surgery, pieces of skin from the
thorax of P2 rats were inserted under the skin flaps of two animals.
Histology. To examine the morphology of adult periosteum
in situ and of mature transplants, rats were perfused
transcardially with 2% paraformaldehyde and 2% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer. Periosteum was dissected from
the sternum, and periosteal transplants were dissected with the
surrounding skin. Tissues were stored in the perfusion fixative until
processing. After rinsing in phosphate buffer, tissues were post-fixed
in 2% osmium tetroxide in H2O and stained
en bloc with uranyl acetate, dehydrated, and embedded in
Epon resin (Polysciences, Warrington, PA). One micrometer
sections were stained with alcoholic toluidine blue.
Histochemistry and immunocytochemistry. The histochemical
and immunocytochemical characteristics of the developing periosteal innervation of the sternum and the ventral portion of the adjacent ribs
were examined at different ages. Embryos were removed from the uterus
of anesthetized mothers on embryonic day 15 (E15), E16, E17, E18, or
E20, and the sternum was either fresh frozen or fixed by immersion in
paraformaldehyde. At the earlier ages, the entire rib cage was fixed
and sectioned. After birth, tissue was removed from unfixed or
perfusion-fixed animals on P0, P4, P8, P14, or P21 and at 6-8 weeks.
Tissue from at least five animals was examined at each stage, except at
E20 and P8 when three animals were studied. Because the bone is not
completely ossified until after P21, cryostat sections were cut through
the entire sternum for all ages except the adult. The periosteum of
adult animals was lifted from the bone before sectioning by removing
rectangular flaps of periosteum from the dorsal (internal) surface of
the sternum with a scalpel.
Endogenous catecholamines were localized in 12-15 µm cryostat
sections of fresh frozen tissue using the glyoxylic acid-induced fluorescence technique of de la Torre (1980) . Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) histochemistry was performed on both perfusion-fixed and fresh-frozen tissue sections with similar results. Fresh-frozen sections were immersed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 5 min before processing. All sections were washed in PBS and reacted as described previously (Landis and Keefe, 1983 ). The reaction mixture contained 1 mM tetra-isopropylpyrophosphoramide (Sigma), an
inhibitor of nonspecific esterases.
For immunocytochemistry, embryonic tissue was immersed in 4%
paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, for 1-2 hr at room temperature. Postnatal rats were perfused
transcardially with this fixative for 10 min, after which the sternum
was removed and post-fixed for an additional 50 min. Adult rats were
perfused with 50 ml of PBS before perfusion with fixative. Fixed
tissue was equilibrated in 30% sucrose in PBS containing 0.01% sodium azide, and frozen sections (12 µm) were cut and mounted onto
gelatin-coated slides. For TH, VIP, and calcitonin gene-related peptide
(CGRP) immunolabeling, tissue sections were preincubated for 1 hr in dilution buffer (0.01 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, 0.5 M NaCl, 0.01% sodium azide, and 5% bovine serum albumin),
incubated overnight with primary antisera diluted in this buffer,
rinsed in PBS, incubated with secondary antisera in dilution buffer
containing 4% rat serum for 2 hr, rinsed, and then mounted with
glycerol/PBS (1:1). All incubations were conducted at room temperature.
For VAChT immunocytochemistry, sections were incubated with the primary
antiserum for 3-5 d at 4°, followed by sequential, room temperature
incubations with biotinylated goat anti-rabbit (1:200; Jackson
ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) in dilution buffer with 5-10% rat
serum for 1 hr and with Cy3-conjugated streptavidin (1:20,000; Jackson
ImmunoResearch) in dilution buffer with no serum for 30 min.
Sections were single- or double-labeled using primary antisera raised
in different species and species-appropriate secondary antisera
conjugated to distinct fluorochromes. Combinations of the following
antisera were used: rabbit anti-VAChT [1:4000; gift of A. Roghani,
Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX; raised against a synthetic
peptide from the C terminus;(Roghani et al., 1998 )], guinea pig
anti-VIP [1:300; generated in our laboratory and specific for VIP
(Tyrrell and Landis, 1994 )], rabbit anti-TH (1:200; Pel-Freez Biologicals, Rogers, AR), and rabbit anti-CGRP (1:500; Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL). The secondary antisera used were fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated goat anti-rabbit (1:200; Cappel, Durham, NC)
and rhodamine-conjugated goat anti-guinea pig (1:200; Jackson ImmunoResearch). These secondary antisera bound only to the appropriate primary antiserum.
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RESULTS |
Properties of adult periosteal innervation
To determine whether the thoracic sympathetic neurons that contain
VIP are cholinergic, sections of thoracic ganglia from adult rats were
double-labeled with an antiserum against VIP and an antiserum that
recognizes the cholinergic marker VAChT (Roghani et al., 1998 ). As
expected, principal sympathetic neurons were encircled by punctate
VAChT-IR cholinergic terminals arising from preganglionic fibers (Fig.
1b). In addition, every
section contained several neuron cell bodies that possessed
immunoreactivity for both VIP and VAChT (Fig.
1a,b).

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Figure 1.
Adult rat thoracic sympathetic ganglion and
periosteum. a, b, Photomicrographs of a
single section through a thoracic sympathetic ganglion double-labeled
for VIP with an antiserum raised in guinea pig and VAChT using an
antiserum raised in rabbit. Several of the cell bodies present in this
section that are immunoreactive for both VIP (a)
and VAChT (b) are indicated by
arrows. The dense plexus of preganglionic fibers that
surround the neuron cell bodies also contain VAChT immunoreactivity
(b). c, A 1 µm plastic section
of periosteum stained with toluidine blue shows the inner cellular
(arrowhead) and outer fibrous
(f) layers. Scale bars, 40 µm.
a and b are the same magnification.
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After screening several candidate bones, we chose to examine the
periosteum of the sternum. The sternum possessed a relatively flat
surface and presented the largest area for analysis. In addition, its
sympathetic innervation arises from thoracic ganglia (Hohmann et al.,
1986 ), which contain cholinergic and VIP-containing neurons but are not
a source of sweat gland innervation. Adult rat periosteum consists of
an outer fibrous layer sparsely populated by fibroblasts and an inner
cellular layer containing osteoblasts and osteoblast progenitor cells
(Fig. 1c). As described previously, (Hohmann et al., 1986 ;
Bjurholm et al., 1988 ; Hill and Elde, 1991 ), VIP-IR fibers were
observed to course through the periosteum (Fig.
2a).

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Figure 2.
Transmitter-related properties of the sympathetic
innervation of adult rat periosteum. a,
b, Photomicrographs of a tangential section of
periosteum double-labeled for VIP and TH. Varicose axons coursing
through the periosteum contain intense VIP (a)
and extremely faint TH (b) immunoreactivity
(arrows). At the top right in
a, there is a single axon that is VIP-IR. This fiber is
distinct from the intensely TH-IR fiber in b.
c, d, Transmitter properties indicative
of cholinergic neurons are also present in periosteal fibers. Fibers
exhibiting punctate VAChT immunoreactivity (c)
and reactivity for AChE (d) are observed in the
periosteum. e, f, To determine whether
VIPergic and cholinergic properties are present in the same fibers,
sections were double-labeled for VIP and VAChT. Periosteal fibers
containing VIP immunoreactivity (e) are also
immunoreactive for VAChT (f).
g, Fibers associated with a blood vessel in the
intercostal muscle adjacent to the sternum exhibit intense TH
immunoreactivity compared with the faint TH immunoreactivity present in
VIP-IR fibers (b). VIP immunoreactivity is absent
from TH-IR perivascular fibers (h)
(arrows). Scale bar: h, 40 µm.
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To determine whether the periosteum receives cholinergic innervation,
sections were single-labeled with the VAChT antiserum, double-labeled
with both VAChT and VIP antisera, or reacted for AChE activity. Fibers
immunoreactive for VAChT or reactive for AChE were identical in number
and distribution to those containing VIP immunoreactivity (Fig.
2a,c,d). After double
labeling for VAChT and VIP, all labeled axons contained both markers
(Fig. 2e,f). The majority of the
VAChT-VIP-IR fibers ran individually in the periosteum, but small
bundles of axons were also observed. Fibers oriented parallel to the
length of the bone were present in both the fibrous and cellular layers
of the periosteum. When sections were double-labeled for VIP and TH,
most VIP-IR fibers exhibited extremely faint immunoreactivity for TH
(Fig. 2a,b), similar to that observed in the
sweat gland innervation of mature rats (Landis et al., 1988 ). In
contrast, axons associated with blood vessels in the periosteum and
surrounding connective tissue and muscle displayed intense TH
immunoreactivity and catecholamine histofluorescence but no VIP or
VAChT immunoreactivity (Fig. 2g,h). Thus, the
VIP-IR fibers, previously shown to be sympathetic in origin (Hohmann et
al., 1986 ; Hill and Elde, 1991 ), are distinct from the sympathetic
fibers innervating vasculature and are cholinergic rather than noradrenergic.
Development of sympathetic periosteal innervation of
the sternum
To determine how and when sympathetic axons reach the sternum,
which is located at the ventralmost extension of the ribs, we examined
sections of the thoracic region of embryos from E15 to birth. Clearly
defined ribs comprised of chondrocytes surrounded by perichondrium
appeared in the lateral body wall at approximately E15. At this age,
TH-IR sympathetic neurons were present in thoracic ganglia, but TH-IR
axons were not observed in the thoracic region. Bundles of intensely
stained VAChT-IR axons, presumably motor in origin, were observed
adjacent to the ribs and in the presumptive intercostal muscles. TH-IR
fibers were observed exiting the thoracic ganglia on E17 and growing
toward the dorsalmost end of the ribs and along the ribs toward the
sternum (Fig. 3). On E18, bundles of
TH-IR fibers were observed in the lateral body wall, associated with
the ribs and sternum. Thus, sympathetic fibers that innervate periosteum of the sternum travel ventrally along the rib periosteum to
reach the sternum.

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Figure 3.
Development of periosteal innervation in the
thoracic region. Axons from thoracic sympathetic neurons are closely
associated with rib periosteum as they grow to the sternum.
a, Bundles of TH-IR sympathetic axons were observed
leaving the ganglion (g) and extending along a
rib (asterisk) on E17. The axons are indicated by
arrows. b, TH-IR sympathetic axons
(arrows) were observed in contact with the periosteum of
the rib (asterisk) on E17. c, A bundle of
TH-IR axons bifurcates, and some course along associated with the
periosteum of the rib (asterisk). a and
b are the same magnification. Scale bars:
a, b, 10 µm; c, 20 µm.
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The initial sympathetic innervation of the periosteal covering of the
sternum exhibited catecholaminergic characteristics, which diminished
with age. Fibers displaying catecholamine histofluorescence and TH-IR
were first observed in the periosteum of the sternum and adjacent ribs
on E18, and their density increased between E18 and P0 (Fig.
4a,b). During
development as in adulthood, periosteal fibers could be distinguished
from those associated with blood vessels because the latter exhibited a
characteristic circular or parallel arrangement. Catecholamine
fluorescent fibers were observed in the periosteum through P8. At P14,
the number of nonvascular catecholamine-containing fibers was
significantly reduced, and at P21, only occasional, faintly fluorescent
fibers were observed. In adult periosteum, nonvascular catecholamine
fluorescent fibers were extremely rare, although intensely fluorescent
fibers were observed surrounding blood vessels in and adjacent to the
periosteum.

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Figure 4.
Development of transmitter-related properties in
the periosteum. a-c, Catecholaminergic properties are
present in developing periosteal fibers. a, On E18,
catecholamine histofluorescent fibers are seen in the periosteum
(arrowheads), which runs vertically in the
photomicrograph, adjacent to the cartilaginous sternum
(s). Catecholamine fluorescent fibers are also
present surrounding a blood vessel that is adjacent to the sternum at
the top of the photomicrograph. b,
c, A single section through the sternum on P0
double-labeled for TH and VIP, showing a TH-IR periosteal fiber
(b) that is not immunoreactive for VIP
(c). d, e, Between
E18 and P0, approximately half of the TH-IR fibers also contain VIP
immunoreactivity, and these VIP-IR fibers, shown here in P0 periosteum
(d), are also immunoreactive for VAChT
(e). s, Cartilage of sternum in
a-e. f-h, One to 2 weeks after birth, a
dual phenotype is evident in the majority of periosteal fibers,
demonstrated in these photomicrographs of longitudinal sections through
the periosteum of the sternum. f, g, On
P14, intense VIP (f) and TH
(g) immunoreactivities are colocalized in most
periosteal fibers (arrows). h,
AChE-reactive fibers are first detected in the periosteum on P8. Scale
bar: h, 40 µm.
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In contrast to the decreased expression of the catecholaminergic
markers, the expression of cholinergic and peptidergic properties increased. At all ages examined, VAChT and VIP were colocalized in
periosteal fibers (Fig. 4d,e), indicating that
these markers were coexpressed and therefore labeled the same
population of fibers. Sparse VAChT- and VIP-IR fibers were observed
between E18 and P0 in the sternum and adjacent, ventral regions of the ribs. Their density increased dramatically after birth. During the
first and second postnatal weeks, VAChT- and VIP-IR fibers attained the
distribution and density seen in mature periosteum. When we examined
the presence of catecholaminergic properties in the
cholinergic-VIPergic fibers in the periosteum of the sternum by double
labeling for TH and VIP, we found that, at E18 and P0, approximately
half the nonvascular TH-IR periosteal fibers lacked VIP (Fig.
4b,c), whereas the others contained
immunoreactivity for both TH and VIP. At P4 through P8, in contrast,
nearly all periosteal fibers in the sternum and adjacent ribs were
double-labeled for both TH and VIP (Fig.
4f,g). At P14, VIP-IR fibers
with only faint TH-IR were consistently observed, as well as fibers
that still contained both VIP and intense immunoreactivity for TH. At
P21 as in the adult, the majority of VIP-IR periosteal fibers displayed
only faint TH-IR (Fig. 2b,c). AChE
activity was not detectable in periosteal fibers until P8 (Fig.
4h), although staining was seen at earlier ages in motor
nerve fibers and end plates in intercostal muscles. By P21, the density
and distribution of periosteal AChE-reactive fibers resembled those
observed in adult periosteum.
6-OHDA treatment eliminates cholinergic sympathetic
innervation of periosteum
To determine whether the cholinergic-VIPergic fibers in mature
periosteum derived from the early catecholaminergic innervation, neonatal pups were treated with the neurotoxin 6-OHDA. When
administered to neonatal rats, 6-OHDA, which is accumulated
specifically by catecholaminergic neurons, destroys peripheral
noradrenergic nerve terminals and cell bodies (Finch et al., 1973 ). We
found that 6-OHDA treatment eliminated not only the fibers containing
catecholamine fluorescence and TH-IR that were present in the
periosteum of P4 pups but also the VAChT- and VIP-IR fibers (data not
shown). Furthermore, staining for VAChT and VIP was virtually
eliminated in the periosteum of adult rats that had been treated as
neonates with 6-OHDA (Fig.
5b-d). In contrast, the
CGRP-IR sensory innervation of the periosteum (Hill and Elde, 1991 ) was
not affected (Fig. 5a). Together with the colocalization of
TH and VIP in developing periosteal fibers, these results provide
evidence that the cholinergic-VIPergic fibers in adult periosteum were
initially catecholaminergic and that the sympathetic periosteal
innervation underwent a transition in phenotype during development.

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Figure 5.
Neonatal 6-OHDA administration reduces the number
of fibers that display cholinergic and VIPergic properties in mature
periosteal fibers. a, b, Double labeling
for CGRP and VIP in a section of periosteum from an adult rat treated
neonatally with 6-OHDA demonstrates that CGRP-IR fibers, presumably of
sensory origin, are not affected by this toxin
(a), but the number of VIP-IR fibers is reduced
dramatically (b). c, 6-OHDA
treatment also reduces the number of VAChT-IR reactive fibers in the
periosteum (d) compared with control
(c). Scale bar: a-d, 20 µm.
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Transplanted periosteum induces a transmitter switch
When periosteum is transplanted heterotopically, it forms bone
(Burman and Umansky, 1930 ). To determine whether the changes in
transmitter properties described above could be the consequence of
interactions with the periosteum, periosteal rudiments from P2 rats
were transplanted under the skin of the lateral thorax of P1 rats. As
expected, the transplanted periosteal rudiments formed small bones, or
ossicles, in the subcutaneous connective tissue. The ossicles were
~3-6 mm in length, consisted of cartilage and bone, and were
surrounded by periosteum that was morphologically indistinguishable
from normal periosteum (Fig.
6a,b). The
skin of the lateral thorax above the transplants developed into hairy skin containing noradrenergic sympathetic fibers innervating blood vessels and piloerectors and sensory fibers immunoreactive for CGRP
(Schotzinger and Landis, 1990 ).

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Figure 6.
Development of transmitter properties of
sympathetic fibers innervating ectopic periosteum. a,
b, One micrometer plastic sections of 2 week
transplants. a, Periosteal rudiments transplanted under
the skin of the lateral thorax form a small bone, consisting of both
cartilage (c) and trabecular bone with
intervening marrow spaces (b). b,
This photomicrograph shows a higher magnification view of the
periosteum surrounding the transplants, which is similar in appearance
to periosteum in situ, with an inner cellular layer
(arrowhead) adjacent to the bone of the transplant.
c-e, Sections of periosteal transplants 1-2 weeks
after surgery. c, Sympathetic fibers that innervate the
periosteum of the transplant initially contain catecholamine
fluorescence. d, e, After double labeling
for TH and VIP, periosteal fibers that contain TH
(d) but not VIP (e)
immunoreactivity are seen. f-h, Sections of periosteal
transplants 4-6 weeks after surgery. f, Few
catecholamine fluorescent fibers are observed in the periosteum
(p) of the transplant 6 weeks after
transplantation, although blood vessels adjacent to the transplant are
surrounded by catecholaminergic fibers (arrow).
g, h, A section of a 4 week transplant
double-labeled for VIP and TH contains intense VIP-IR fibers
(g), and these fibers exhibit only faint TH
immunoreactivity (h). g,
Inset, VAChT-IR fibers are also observed in the
periosteum of a transplant 4 weeks after surgery. Scale bars:
a, h, 40 µm. b-h are
the same magnification.
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The transmitter properties of fibers innervating the periosteum of the
transplants underwent a phenotypic transition resembling that displayed
by the innervation of the periosteum developing in situ. One
week after transplantation, only rare catecholamine-positive and TH-IR
fibers, but no VIP-IR fibers, were observed. After 2 weeks, the number
of nonvascular catecholamine fluorescent fibers associated with the
periosteum had increased (Fig. 6c), and fibers immunoreactive for TH alone (Fig. 6d,e) or
double-labeled for TH and VIP were observed. In the periosteum of 4 week transplants, catecholamine-containing fibers were observed less
frequently than at 2 weeks, and the number of VAChT- and VIP-IR fibers
had increased (Fig. 6g). Double labeling for VIP and TH
revealed that the VIP-IR fibers were either single-labeled for VIP or
exhibited only faint TH immunoreactivity (Fig.
6g,h). Six weeks after surgery, few
catecholamine fluorescent or single-labeled TH-IR fibers were evident
(Fig. 6f). As at 4 weeks, however,
VAChT- and VIP-IR fibers were present, and the VIP-IR fibers contained
either faint or no detectable TH immunoreactivity. In contrast to
normal periosteal innervation, no AChE-reactive fibers were seen
associated with the transplant or in the hairy skin, although the other
transmitter-related properties characteristic of periosteal innervation appeared.
To confirm the sympathetic origin of the cholinergic and VIP-IR
periosteal fibers, some pups receiving transplants were treated with
6-OHDA. This treatment resulted in the absence of catecholaminergic fibers in the periosteum and surrounding hairy skin 2 weeks after transplantation and dramatically reduced the number of VIP-IR, but not
CGRP-IR, fibers in the periosteum of 6 week transplants (data not
shown). To confirm that the transplantation procedure itself did not
affect transmitter properties, a piece of skin was transplanted
subcutaneously to the lateral thorax. Six weeks after transplantation,
sympathetic and sensory innervation in the region of transplanted skin
was identical to that described previously in adult rat hairy skin
(Schotzinger and Landis, 1990 ), with no VAChT- or VIP-IR fibers present.
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DISCUSSION |
Periosteum is a previously unrecognized target of cholinergic
sympathetic neurons. The similarities in the transmitter properties of
the mature sympathetic innervation of periosteum and sweat glands are
striking. Both display cholinergic properties, AChE reactivity, and VIP
immunoreactivity (Sjoqvist, 1963 ; Lundberg et al., 1979 ; Landis and
Keefe, 1983 ; Hohmann et al., 1986 ; Leblanc and Landis, 1986 ; Landis et
al., 1988 ; Guidry and Landis, 1998b ). In sweat glands, cholinergic
function is evident from the findings that nerve-evoked secretion is
muscarinic in pharmacology (Langley, 1891 ; Stevens and Landis, 1987 )
and sympathetic fibers innervating sweat glands release acetylcholine
(Dale and Feldberg, 1934 ) and contain ChAT activity and ChAT
immunoreactivity (Leblanc and Landis, 1986 ). The tools that were
successful in revealing cholinergic function in sweat gland innervation
are less readily applicable to periosteum. Although the presence of
nicotinic acetylcholine receptor mRNA in avian periosteum (Romano et
al., 1997 ) suggests that cholinergic sympathetic innervation influences
periosteal function, in contrast to sweat glands, it is unclear what
aspects of periosteal function are regulated by the cholinergic
innervation. Assays of ChAT activity in periosteum are confounded by
contaminating skeletal muscle that remains attached after dissection.
Finally, the ChAT antibodies presently available fail to label
cholinergic sympathetic fibers in periosteum or sweat glands. The
development of antisera recognizing VAChT, which transports
acetylcholine into synaptic vesicles and is required for cholinergic
transmission, has provided a new tool for mapping cholinergic terminals
(Roghani et al., 1998 ; Schafer et al., 1998 ). The use of VAChT as a
cholinergic marker is validated by the discovery that the gene encoding
VAChT is embedded in and coordinately regulated with the gene encoding ChAT (Alfonso et al., 1994 ; Bejanin et al., 1994 ; Erickson et al.,
1994 ; Berrard et al., 1995 ; Berse and Blusztajn, 1995 ; Misawa et al.,
1995 ) and VAChT immunoreactivity coincides with ChAT immunoreactivity in cell bodies and terminal fields of classically defined cholinergic neurons (Roghani et al., 1998 ; Schafer et al., 1998 ).
Two lines of evidence indicate that the mature cholinergic-VIPergic
periosteal innervation initially displays catecholaminergic properties.
First, immunoreactivities for VIP and TH and for VIP and VAChT were
colocalized in developing periosteal axons. Although catecholamine
fluorescence was absent from the mature innervation, indicating the
absence of stored catecholamines, faint TH immunoreactivity, similar to
that seen in mature sweat gland innervation (Landis et al., 1988 ), was
detectable in many VIP-IR periosteal fibers. Second, when we treated
neonatal rats with 6-OHDA, a specific noradrenergic neurotoxin, to
eliminate developing catecholaminergic neurons (Finch et al., 1973 ), we
found that VAChT-IR, VIP-IR, and AChE-reactive fibers were absent from
P4 and adult periosteum. Furthermore, ChAT activity was reduced by half
in homogenates of periosteum but not intercostal muscle (data not
shown). Because VAChT immunoreactivity was absent from the periosteum
of 6-OHDA-treated animals, the residual ChAT activity in homogenates is
very likely to come from motor end plates in intercostal muscles, which
adhere tightly to the periosteum and are difficult to remove completely during dissection. The developing sympathetic innervation of sweat glands is similarly sensitive to 6-OHDA (Yodlowski et al., 1984 ).
The results of the transplantation studies indicate that periosteum can
induce alterations in the transmitter properties of sympathetic neurons
that innervate it. When periosteal rudiments were implanted under the
hairy skin of neonatal rats, sympathetic fibers that normally innervate
noradrenergic targets in hairy skin, piloerectors, and blood vessels
(Schotzinger and Landis, 1990 ) became associated instead with the
periosteum covering the ossicles that formed beneath the hairy skin.
The axons innervating the transplanted tissue initially displayed
catecholaminergic properties but subsequently acquired VAChT- and
VIP-IR. This transition in phenotype, occurring in neurons that
normally remain noradrenergic, is similar to that of developing
periosteal innervation in situ. Our results are consistent
with and extend those of Bjurholm and colleagues (1990) , who observed
VIP-IR fibers innervating the periosteum surrounding heterotopic bone
induced by transplantation of bone matrix to abdominal muscles of adult
rats. In these studies, however, the origin of the VIP-immunoreactive
fibers was not determined. Furthermore, transplantation of bone matrix
into adult muscle could have axotomized preexisting sympathetic axons
and induced VIP expression (Hyatt-Sachs et al., 1993 ). In the present
study, the VAChT- and VIP-immunoreactive fibers innervating the
transplant were identified as sympathetic via colocalization of VIP and
TH, as well as 6-OHDA sensitivity, and transplantation was performed at
P1 before sympathetic or sensory fibers arrive in lateral thoracic skin
(Schotzinger and Landis, 1990 ). Together, the results of our
experiments provide evidence that periosteum, like sweat glands, can
induce a cholinergic-VIPergic phenotype in sympathetic neurons. In
contrast to the appearance of VAChT and VIP immunoreactivity in fibers
innervating the transplanted periosteum, AChE reactivity, normally
present in periosteal innervation after P7, was not detected. It is of
interest in this regard that AChE reactivity is present in some, but
not all, sympathetic fibers that innervate sweat glands transplanted to
hairy skin, although catecholamines are uniformly lost and ChAT
activity is acquired (Schotzinger et al., 1994 ). Acquisition of AChE
may be regulated independently from other transmitter properties or
alternatively hairy skin may contain an activity that inhibits the
development of AChE.
Although the transplantation studies provide evidence that periosteum
can induce cholinergic and peptidergic properties and reduce the
expression of noradrenergic properties in sympathetic neurons in
vivo, they do not establish that interactions with the periosteum
are responsible for changes in normal periosteal innervation. When we
examined the transmitter properties of sympathetic axons in periosteum
of the sternum, we found that, although all fibers expressed TH
immunoreactivity upon their arrival at the sternum between E18 and P0,
half of them also exhibited VAChT and VIP immunoreactivity. This
observation raised the possibility that some sympathetic neurons
expressed cholinergic and peptidergic properties in addition to
noradrenergic before interacting with the periosteum. Examination of
younger embryos, however, revealed that after exiting the thoracic
ganglia sympathetic fibers traveled in association with rib periosteum
to reach the sternum and therefore would have been exposed to
periosteal-derived cholinergic inducing factor(s) as they grew. Thus,
although the periosteum of the sternum offers a number of experimental
advantages for the developmental analysis of transmitter properties of
periosteal innervation, it has the disadvantage of being the most
ventral periosteum in the thorax and at the most distal reach of the
sympathetic axons. The finding that the sweat gland-targeted
innervation in Tabby mutant mice, which lack sweat glands,
does not acquire VAChT or VIP immunoreactivities but maintains
noradrenergic properties has provided compelling evidence for the
essential role of the sweat glands in inducing changes in the sweat
gland innervation (Guidry and Landis, 1998a ). Because the periosteum is
essential for bone formation during development, it is not possible at
present to eliminate it and examine the effects of this manipulation on the transmitter properties of periosteal neurons.
Based on the induction of a similar transmitter repertoire, the
periosteal factor and sweat gland factors are likely to be related or
identical. The sweat gland factor appears to be a member of the
neuropoietic cytokine family (Rao and Landis, 1990 ; Bazan, 1991 ;
Patterson, 1992 ; Rao et al., 1992 ). Several members of this family,
which includes ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), leukemia inhibitory
factor (LIF), and cardiotrophin-1 (CT-1), induce cholinergic and reduce
noradrenergic properties in cultured sympathetic neurons (Fukada, 1985 ;
Saadat et al., 1989 ; Yamamori et al., 1989 ; Pennica et al., 1995 ).
Analyses of transgenic mice and culture studies provide no evidence,
however, that the sweat gland factor is LIF, CNTF, or CT-1 (Rao et al.,
1992 , 1993 ; Habecker et al., 1995 , 1997 ; Francis et al., 1997 ).
Although the characterization of the periosteal factor is less well
advanced than that of the sweat gland factor, studies to date suggest
that it also does not correspond to either LIF or CNTF (Francis et al.,
1997 ).
The effects of the change in transmitter properties on neural
regulation of periosteal function are incompletely understood. Because
of its osteogenic potential, periosteum is crucial for bone
development and fracture healing (Hall, 1970 ), and sympathetic input
has been postulated to play a critical role in these processes. For
example, neonatal chemical sympathectomy and adult surgical sympathectomy decrease osteoblast metabolism and increase bone remodeling or osteoclast activity (Singh et al., 1982 ; Sandhu et al.,
1987 , 1990 ; Hill et al., 1991 ). Evidence exists for a possible role of
VIP in that cultured osteosarcoma cells possess VIP receptors (Hohmann
and Tashjian, 1984 ) and VIP stimulates bone resorption in mouse
calvaria in organ culture (Hohmann et al., 1983 ). Although embryonic
chick periosteal cells express nicotinic receptor mRNA (Romano et al.,
1997 ), no periosteal response to acetylcholine has been described. The
lack of understanding of the functional consequences of the
target-induced change in transmitter properties in periosteal
innervation is in marked contrast to sweat glands in which the
induction of cholinergic function in the innervation is required to
trigger and maintain secretory responsiveness (Stevens and Landis,
1987 ; Grant et al., 1995 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 19, 1999; revised Nov. 24, 1999; accepted Dec. 3, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants
NS023678 (S.C.L.) and NS09709 (S.E.A.), the Kentucky Academy of
Sciences (S.E.A.), and the National Institute of Neurological Diseases
and Stroke Intramural Research Program. We thank Dr. Robert J. Schotzinger, who played an important role in early aspects of the
project, Dr. Ali Roghani, who kindly provided the vesicular acetylcholine transporter antiserum, Xiang-Hong Song for assistance with preliminary experiments, and Hua Tian for technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Story C. Landis at the above
address. E-mail: slandis{at}codon.nih.gov.
Dr. Asmus's present address: Department of Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology, Centre College, Danville, KY 40422.
 |
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