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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 15, 2001, 21(2):654-667
Increased Neuromuscular Activity Reduces Sprouting in Partially
Denervated Muscles
Siu Lin
Tam,
Vey
Archibald,
Balvinder
Jassar,
Neil
Tyreman, and
Tessa
Gordon
Department of Pharmacology, Division of Neuroscience, University of
Alberta, Edmonton, Canada T6G 2S2
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ABSTRACT |
The effects of increasing neural activity on sprouting remain
unclear and controversial. In a rat model of partial denervation of
skeletal muscles, we investigated the effect of neuromuscular activity
on sprouting. Rat hindlimb muscles were partially denervated by
avulsion of either L4 or L5 spinal root. Immediately after partial
denervation, the rats were divided into three groups: (1) normal caged
activity, (2) running exercise on wheels, 8 hr daily, and (3)
functional electrical stimulation (FES) of sciatic nerves, 20 Hz for 8 hr daily. At 1 month, muscle unit (MU) enlargement was quantitated
electrophysiologically and histochemically. MU twitch force was
increased by four- to fivefold by partial denervation in extensively
denervated tibialis anterior (TA) and medial gastrocnemius (MG) and by
approximately twofold in moderately denervated plantaris (PL) and
soleus (SOL). For the extensively denervated TA and MG muscles, MU
enlargement, measured electrophysiologically, declined significantly
after an average of 1757 ± 310 m/d running exercise and
daily FES for 1 month. The detrimental effects on MU enlargement were
much less but significant in the moderately denervated PL and did not
reach statistical significance in the moderately denervated SOL muscle.
Histochemical evaluation of sprouting showed a reduction in the number
of sprouts in the extensively denervated TA muscle, but not the
moderately denervated PL and SOL muscles, by increased neuromuscular
activity. Thus, increased neuromuscular activity is detrimental
primarily in muscles that are extensively denervated, and the MUs are
smaller than under conditions in which the muscles experience normal
physiological levels of activation.
Key words:
sprouting; motor unit; motoneuron disease; neuromuscular
activity; partial denervation; poliomyelitis
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INTRODUCTION |
Poliomyelitis, the early stages of
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), spinal cord trauma, and motoneuron
destruction associated with cancer are only some of the neuromuscular
conditions resulting in compensatory axonal sprouting and, in turn, MU
enlargement (Brown et al., 1981 ; Halstead and Wiechers, 1987 ). MU
enlargement is unfortunately restricted to a limit of five- to
eightfold such that sprouting compensates for up to 85% loss of muscle
units (MUs) (Thompson and Jansen, 1977 ; Brown and Ironton, 1978 ; Yang et al., 1990 ; Rafuse et al., 1992 ). Thus when <20% of intact MUs remain and sprouting cannot reinnervate all denervated muscle fibers,
muscle weakness becomes evident (Luff et al., 1988 ; Rafuse et al.,
1992 ; Rafuse and Gordon, 1996a ,b ).
The strong association of exercise with muscle strength and endurance
has led naturally to attempts to optimize muscle function with
exercise. However, the effects of neuromuscular activity on sprouting
are both unclear and controversial because of the conflicting findings
of previous studies of these effects. Some studies have shown that
activity can promote sprouting or reinnervation (Ribchester, 1988 ;
Einsiedel and Luff, 1994 ) or that it has no effect at all (Gardiner and
Faltus, 1986 ; Michel and Gardiner, 1989 ; Seburn and Gardiner, 1996 ),
whereas others have shown inhibitory effects of activity on sprouting
(Brown and Holland, 1979 ; Gardiner et al., 1984 ; Rafuse et al., 1992 ).
In most of these studies, the extent of partial denervation was
moderate, possibly contributing to the variability in the effects of
increased neuromuscular activity on MU enlargement.
We have reexamined the issue in extensively denervated muscles using
two functionally different muscles, tibialis anterior, flexor (TA) and
medial gastrocnemius, extensor (MG) muscles, and compared the
effectiveness of neuromuscular activity in modulating MU enlargement in
these muscles with the more frequently studied soleus (SOL) and
plantaris (PL) muscles. A further modification in the experimental
approach has been to (1) document the extent of partial denervation for
each muscle, (2) use complementary force measurement and histochemical
method to quantitate MU enlargement and sprouting, respectively, and
(3) compare the effect of natural (running on exercise wheels) and
artificial [functional electrical stimulation (FES)] means of
increasing neuromuscular activity on sprouting. We show that increased
neuromuscular activity during the acute phase of sprouting is not
beneficial for sprouting. In fact, increased neuromuscular activity is
detrimental primarily in partially denervated muscles in which MUs
enlarge by a factor of 2 or more, and the MUs are smaller than under
conditions in which the muscles experience normal physiological levels
of activation.
The present results have been presented previously in abstract form
(Tam et al., 1995 , 1996 , 1997 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Surgical procedures
A total of 55 female Sprague Dawley rats (body weight 180-200
gm) were used for these studies. Rats were fed normal rat food and
supplied with water. Surgery was performed under surgical anesthesia
(sodium pentobarbital administered intraperitoneally as 0.07 ml/g body
weight) and aseptic conditions. A small incision near the L4 and L5
spinal roots was made on the back of the rats. Either the L4
(n = 23) or L5 (n = 20) spinal root was
avulsed unilaterally to extensively (>80% partial denervation)
denervate TA (L4 avulsion) or MG muscles (L5 avulsion) and moderately
(~50% partial denervation) denervate PL and SOL muscles. Immediately after partial denervation, the rats were divided into three groups. (1)
Normal caged activity (n = 20): rats were put back into
their normal rat cages and allowed to continue their normal caged
activity. (2) Natural running exercise on wheels (n = 11): rats were allowed to run voluntarily on exercise wheels for 8 hr/d. Throughout the 8 hr, running distance was recorded for individual
rats. The running distance per day (i.e., 8 hr) for individual rats was
calculated by dividing the total running distance by the total number
of days. The average running distance per day was calculated by
averaging the running distances per day of all rats. (3) FES
(n = 12): A 2 cm length of insulation was removed at
the end of the two stainless steel wires to implant on either side of
the sciatic nerve in the experimental leg for chronic electrical
stimulation. In some cases, the insulated wires were externalized and
attached to an external stimulator (Grass SD9) via an implanted
connector, which was placed and secured on a pedestal at the back of
the animal's head. The externalized wires were protected by a spring
core on the outside such that the animal could not chew on them, and
they were long enough (~3 feet long) to allow the animals to move
freely. In others, the insulated wires remained internalized and
attached to an implantable and locally made electrical stimulator that was turned on and off by a flash of light. Supramaximal pulses of 100 µsec were delivered at 20 Hz for 8 hr/d. Threshold voltage was
established to evoke muscle twitch contractions. The voltage was set at
2× threshold.
The number of MUs recruited during exercise varies according to the
muscle such that daily voluntary exercise does not necessarily recruit
all MUs. We therefore used supramaximal electrical stimulation of
sciatic nerve to recruit all MUs. We chose a low-stimulation frequency
of 20 Hz, the classical firing frequency of slow MUs in SOL muscle,
which at continuous stimulation rates does not occlude muscle blood
supply in either fast or slow muscles (Pette and Vrbova, 1992 ). We used
8 hr of electrical stimulation in this study to ensure a high daily
period of activity. Initially, stimulated muscles became fatigued
rapidly (Pette and Vrbova, 1992 ; Gordon, 1995 ), but when associated
with stimulation of angiogenesis and conversion of anaerobic to aerobic
metabolism, the muscles became fatigue resistant, which was associated
with conversion of muscle fiber type. The unoperated muscles of
the left side hindlimb of the experimental rats served as contralateral controls.
One month later, implanted wires were removed from the animals of the
FES group and checked visually to ensure that there was no corrosion,
which could cause potential tissue damage. Muscle force and MU
enlargement were evaluated in all four muscles using muscle and MU
force measurements. Subsequently, TA and MG muscles were removed for
staining for acid or alkaline-myosin ATPase, whereas PL and SOL muscles
were removed for either toluidine blue histological staining or
combined silver/acetylcholinesterase (Ag/AChE) histochemical staining.
Both electrophysiological and histochemical evaluations were performed
in the PL and SOL muscles, where L4 or L5 avulsion resulted in moderate
denervation with few exceptions of partial denervation that exceeded
75%. Only electrophysiological evaluation was performed in the TA and
MG muscles because they were prepared for cross-sectional histochemical
analysis (myosin ATPase) and muscle fiber cross-sectional area (CSA)
measurement to correct the force measurements for changes in CSA. To
obtain morphological evidence of sprouting to complement the
electrophysiological data in extensively denervated muscles, a further
set of experiments was performed in a group of rats (n = 12). Avulsion of L4 spinal root was performed to extensively
denervate the hindlimb flexor muscles (n = 8). Equal
numbers of rats were subjected to either normal cage activity
(n = 4) or natural running exercise on wheels (n = 4, 8 hr daily). Unoperated rats (n = 4) were used as normal controls. At 4 weeks, rats were perfused
transcardially with 4% buffered formalin, and fixed TA muscles were
removed and prepared for Ag/AChE histochemical staining.
Muscle and MU force recordings
At the end of the 4-week experimental treatment, muscle force
and MU enlargement were evaluated by muscle and MU isometric force
measurements in the final experiment. Rats were again anesthetized using sodium pentobarbital. Hydration and blood volume were maintained by hourly intravenous injection of saline solution via external jugular
cannulas. The trachea was cannulated for mechanical ventilation. TA,
MG, PL, and SOL muscles were isolated bilaterally by denervating all
other hip, tail, and hindlimb muscles (Fig.
1A). Bipolar silver wires were placed on either side of the sciatic nerve for stimulation. Braided silk threads, 2.0 gauge, were tied to the distal muscle tendons
for attachment to a force transducer, and the skin around the incision
was closed loosely. A laminectomy from L3 to L6 spinal processes was
performed to isolate the L4 and L5 spinal ventral roots
bilaterally.

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Figure 1.
Muscle and MU twitch forces recordings.
A, Each rat hindlimb muscle (TA, tibialis
anterior; MG, medial gastrocnemius; PL,
plantaris; SOL, soleus) was isolated by denervating all
other hindlimb muscles and attached to a force transducer. Ventral
roots L4 and L5 were isolated. Whole-muscle twitch force elicited by
stimulation of each ventral root (L4 or L5) was recorded. Ventral roots
were then split into small filaments for stimulation of single motor
axons. B, Single MU force was elicited by gradually
increasing stimulation voltage to progressively recruit single MUs as
judged by all-or-none increments in twitch force. Isometric twitch
contractions (5-10) elicited at 1 Hz stimulation were digitized and
averaged. Individual MU twitch force was obtained by digital
subtraction.
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For each partially denervated and contralateral unoperated control
muscle, isometric twitch and tetanic forces were recorded in response
to suprathreshold (2× threshold) sciatic nerve stimulation. Maximal
evoked muscle twitch and tetanic forces were measured in response to 1, 5, and 21 pulses at 100 Hz at a repetition rate of 0.5-1 Hz.
Recordings were made sequentially in the TA, MG, SOL, and PL muscles.
The muscles and their innervation were separated sufficiently so that
the evoked muscle contractions of the one muscle attached to the strain
gauge was not interfered with by the contractions of the muscles that
were not attached to the strain gauge. For each muscle, length for
maximal twitch force was determined before the force recordings. Muscle
tetanic force elicited by stimulation of each ventral root (L4 or L5)
was recorded. Thereafter, MU force recordings were made sequentially in
the same muscles. The sciatic nerve was stimulated to evoke
whole-muscle contractions at regular intervals throughout the MU
recording to check the integrity of the innervation. Recordings were
discontinued if muscle contractions declined by >10%. The ventral
roots were teased into small filaments, each of which contained
approximately 5-10 motor axons to the muscle in which MU force
recording was being performed. A single MU was isolated by the
all-or-none recruitment of a twitch contraction (Fig.
1B) by increasing the stimulation voltage applied to
the rootlet as shown in Figure 1A and described previously (Tötösy de Zepetnek et al., 1992a ). The signal
was sufficiently amplified for visualization of the isometric twitch contraction on an oscilloscope screen and a Gould pen recorder with a 5 V maximum. The voltage of the 10 µsec stimulus pulse applied to the
rootlet was increased gradually until an all-or-none twitch contraction
was evoked 50% of the time. The stimulus voltage was then increased to
2× threshold for signal averaging of 5-10 contractions repeated at 1 Hz. The same method was repeated to recruit a second and up to seven
MUs, using the same all-or-none criteria. The number of MUs recruited
in this fashion was limited to approximately seven so that force
increments were always clearly delineated.
As previously demonstrated for MU populations with twitch and tetanic
forces that vary over a 10-to 100-fold range, at least 40% of the MU
population must be sampled to adequately represent the population
(Rafuse et al., 1992 ). Hence we recorded twitch forces in up to 40% of
the MUs in the contralateral control muscles and all MUs in the
partially denervated muscles. MUs were isolated first in the TA (L4
root avulsion) or MG (L5 root avulsion) muscle by splitting the
remaining root containing an average of 10 MUs for the TA and MG
muscles before isolating MUs in the PL and SOL muscles. The
corresponding roots were teased on the contralateral side to record MUs
in the corresponding intact muscles. In each experiment, MU recording
from a single muscle was repeated after the nerves to the other three
muscles were cut as a further check of the validity of the method.
Histochemistry
Acid or alkaline-myosin ATPase. After muscle and MU
force recordings, TA and MG muscles were quickly removed, cut into
three cross-sectional blocks, and frozen in isopentane cooled in liquid nitrogen. Cryostat cross sections (mainly from the middle portion of
the muscles) at 12 µm were cut and stained for acid or
alkaline-myosin ATPase (Tötösy de Zepetnek et al., 1992b ).
Muscle fiber CSA was subsequently measured from these sections.
Combined Ag/AChE histochemical staining. PL and
SOL muscles were removed and then fixed in 4% formalin overnight and
cryoprotected by subsequent overnight incubation in gum sucrose
solution. Muscles were then frozen in isopentane at 74°C. Cryostat
longitudinal sections at 100 µm were cut and stained using combined
Ag/AChE histochemical staining to visualize the motor axons, sprouts, and endplates. For cholinesterase staining, 100 µm cryostat
longitudinal sections were collected in distilled water and incubated
for 25 min at room temperature in a mixture of 0.01 M Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.2, bromoindoxyl acetate,
1.65% potassium ferricyanide, 2.11% potassium ferrocyanide, and
1.11% calcium chloride. For silver staining, sections from
acetylcholinesterase staining were (1) incubated in 20% silver nitrate
for 15 min, then (2) incubated in 3% sodium sulfite for 10 min, and
finally (3) developed in a mixture of silver nitrate and physical
developer. Washing in distilled water was performed between steps. The
number of sprouts and free endplates were subsequently counted from the
sections. Silver staining revealed the motor axons as brown. AChE
staining revealed the location of motor endplates by staining the
enzyme, acetylcholinesterase, which locates at the synaptic lamina,
greenish-blue. Unlike acetylcholine receptors, acetylcholinesterase
stays indefinitely after denervation.
Toluidine blue. Because sufficient sprout counts
were obtained from a representative number of PL and SOL muscles, the
remaining muscles were prepared for toluidine blue histological
staining and subsequently for measurement of muscle fiber CSA. Cryostat cross sections (from the middle portion of the muscles) at 12 µm were
cut and stained using 5% toluidine blue solution. Muscle fiber CSA was
then measured from these sections.
Data analysis
Muscle fiber CSA. We measured CSAs of
sampled muscle fibers (at least 40% of the total number of muscle
fibers) in both the partially denervated and contralateral TA, MG, PL,
and SOL muscles using a microcomputer digitizing software program
(JAVA, Jandel Scientific). Muscle fibers were sampled randomly
throughout the muscle sections as described previously
(Tötösy de Zepetnek et al., 1992b ). In the partially
denervated muscles, we found two distinct populations of size of muscle
fibers: a smaller and a larger, which correspond to denervated and
innervated muscle fibers, respectively. The mean CSA of the larger
population, corresponding to the innervated muscle fibers in the
partially denervated muscles, was used for correction of whole muscle
twitch force of each muscle and MU twitch force of each single MU in
each muscle. A systematic error associated with possible shrinkage
(~10%) caused by tissue freezing did not affect the normalization of
forces because it was done by multiplying the force by the ratio of CSA
of the contralateral muscle to that of the experimental muscle. Because
CSAs of both muscles were measured under the same conditions and
criteria, any systematic errors were canceled out. The mean muscle
fiber CSAs of both the partially denervated and contralateral TA, MG, PL, and SOL muscles for all experimental groups were calculated and are
shown in Table 1.
MU number and size, and whole muscle force. All
MUs in each partially denervated muscle and at least 40% of MUs in
contralateral control muscles were counted and sampled to obtain a
representative mean MU twitch force in each case. The total number of
MUs innervating each muscle was estimated by dividing the whole muscle
twitch force by the mean MU twitch force of each muscle. This
estimation of MU numbers was in agreement with the MU counts, there
being no significant difference between them for any muscle. For the partially denervated TA muscles, for example, the estimated and recorded numbers of remaining MUs were, respectively, 7 ± 2 and 6 ± 2 after caged activity, 8 ± 2 and 7 ± 1 after
running exercise, and 4 ± 2 and 5 ± 2 after FES for a total
of 4-7 animals per group. MU twitch force of each single MU in each
experimental muscle was corrected for changes in CSAs by multiplying
the recorded force value by the ratio of the mean muscle fiber CSA of
all contralateral muscles to that of all experimental muscles that
belonged to the same experimental condition. The forces, which were
corrected by CSAs, are referred to as "corrected" throughout this
paper. MU force is the product of innervation ratio (IR; number of
muscle fibers innervated by one motoneuron), muscle fiber CSA, and
specific force (force per unit area of muscle fiber). Several studies
have shown that MU force varies systematically with IR and CSA in both normal and reinnervated muscles (Kanda and Hashizume, 1992 ;
Tötösy de Zepetnek et al., 1992a ), but specific
force does not change after reinnervation (Tötösy de
Zepetnek et al., 1992a ; Fu and Gordon, 1995a ,b ). Therefore, MU force
corrected for muscle fiber CSA reasonably reflects IR.
Extent of partial denervation. Our previous study
has shown that there is a bilateral symmetry of the left and right
sides in the hindlimb muscle forces and innervation contributions of the ventral roots in normal rats (our unpublished data). The study showed that the mean difference between the two sides in the
innervation contributions of L4 and L5 spinal roots caused by
experimental and physiological variability was well within the
acceptable limits. Similar findings have also been shown in studies
using cats (Buller and Pope, 1977 ; Gordon et al., 1986 ). Therefore, we
determined the contributions of L4 and L5 spinal roots to the muscles
on the contralateral side to obtain a reasonable estimate of extent of
partial denervation of the muscles on the experimental side. Muscle
tetanic force elicited by the stimulation of each spinal root and
sciatic nerve on the contralateral side were measured. The ratio of
muscle tetanic force elicited by the stimulation of each spinal root to
that elicited by the stimulation of sciatic nerve was determined and
used to represent the extent of partial denervation of the muscles on
the experimental side. To ensure the accuracy of the estimation, the
number of remaining MUs on the experimental side was also counted
electrophysiologically (see above).
Analysis of axonal sprouts and free endplates.
Initially, we examined at least 3500 endplates in 18-22
longitudinal sections of two PL and two SOL muscles (>90% of all
endplates). Subsequently, data from analysis of 500 endplates in the
same muscles from a total of six sections from the middle portion of
the muscle were not significantly different from data from the analysis
of the 3500 endplates per muscle in the same two muscles. Hence, we
analyzed 500 rather than the larger number of endplates subsequently
for all the remaining muscles. Endplates from sections stained for combined Ag/AChE histochemical staining were examined under light microscopy at a total magnification of 160× or 400× and classified as
one of the following: (1) free endplates (endplates having no visible
axonal attachment) and (2) endplates reinnervated by intranodal sprouts
(axonal outgrowth coming out from a node of Ranvier), preterminal
sprouts (axonal outgrowth originating from the myelin-free region of an
axon at the entry point to the motor endplates), or ultraterminal
sprouts (axonal outgrowth from the myelin-free axons within the motor
endplate region). The percentage of endplates that were reinnervated by
either type of sprouts was determined. The quantity of free endplates
was determined by the percentage of free endplates from the total
number of endplates sampled. All counting was "blind" in the sense
that the investigator was not aware of the nature of the tissue samples
being examined. The identity of muscles from the different experimental
groups was unknown at the time of counting and encoded. The identity of
muscles was revealed only after the counting was completed.
Statistics
Throughout this paper, means with SEs are given. Statistical
significance of differences in the mean numbers of MUs, numbers of
sprouts, and free endplates between control, partially denervated muscles with and without neural activation was determined using one-way
ANOVA and subsequently Tukey's honestly significance difference (HSD)
Test. One-way ANOVA was used to determine whether differences among the
mean scores between and within experimental groups were statistically
significant. When significant differences existed, Tukey's HSD test,
one of the post hoc tests, was performed to determine the
loci of the significance. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov test (Daniel, 1995 )
was applied to examine statistical significance of differences in
cumulative distribution of MU twitch force between control, partially
denervated muscles with and without neural activation. For all above
statistical analyses, p < 0.05 was regarded as significant.
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RESULTS |
Throughout this study, no significant difference was found in MU
numbers and MU twitch forces between the contralateral control muscles
for different experimental groups. Thus, the results from the
contralateral control muscles for different experimental groups were
grouped and used as an overall control. As for the quantitation of
sprout and free-endplate numbers, there was no significant difference
between the normal and the contralateral control muscles. Thus, the
results from both groups were grouped and used as an overall control.
MU numbers and reduction by partial denervation
We reduced the number of intact MUs in TA, MG, PL, and SOL muscles
by avulsion of either L4 or L5 spinal roots. The contribution of each
spinal root to motor innervation of the muscles is bilaterally symmetrical (Buller and Pope, 1977 ). Hence, the extent of partial denervation of the experimental muscles was determined from the ratio
of muscle tetanic force elicited by the stimulation of either L4 or L5
spinal root to that elicited by the stimulation of sciatic nerve on the
contralateral unoperated control side. As shown in Figure
2A, stimulation of L4
ventral root evoked >80% of the force in TA muscle and stimulation L5
ventral root evoked >80% of the force in MG muscle, indicating that
L4 ventral root carries the majority of motor axons to the TA muscle
and L5 ventral root carries the majority of motor axons to the MG
muscle. In comparison, PL and SOL muscles demonstrated a much less
preferential distribution of motor axons in the L4 and L5 ventral
roots. Also shown in Figure 2 are the differences in the muscles with
respect to mean muscle twitch force (Fig. 2B), number
of MUs (Fig. 2C), and MU twitch force (Fig.
2D). Muscle twitch force correlated more directly with MU number than mean MU twitch force, which was very similar in
fast-twitch muscles and smaller in the slow-twitch SOL muscle, which
contains predominantly slow MUs.

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Figure 2.
Mean (±SE) percentage of ventral root L4
(open histograms) or L5 (filled
histograms) innervation (A), mean muscle
twitch forces (B), mean MU numbers
(C), and mean MU twitch forces
(D) of TA, MG, PL, and SOL muscles. Avulsion of
L4 spinal root resulted in >80% denervation in TA muscle, ranging
from 48 to 100% (average 89 ± 3%; n = 21).
Avulsion of L5 spinal root resulted in >80% denervation in MG muscle,
ranging from 75 to 99% (average 90 ± 2%; n = 20), but avulsion of either L4 or L5 spinal roots resulted in less
extensive denervation in PL muscle, ranging from 4 to 92% (average
45 ± 4%; n = 39), and SOL muscle, ranging
from 2 to 95% (average 47 ± 4%; n = 38).
TA, MG, PL, and SOL muscles had the mean MU numbers of 141 ± 17 (n = 9), 108 ± 8 (n = 11), 53 ± 6 (n = 10), and 26 ± 2 (n = 11), respectively; the mean muscle twitch
forces of 2040 ± 156 (n = 9), 1770 ± 161 (n = 11), 836 ± 52 (n = 10), and 28 ± 24 (11), respectively; and the mean MU twitch
forces of 15.8 ± 0.7 (n' = 245), 16.4 ± 0.6 (n' = 303), 1601 ± 0.7 (n' = 161), and 11.0 ± 0.5 (n' = 105), respectively.
Muscle force varies more directly with mean number than mean MU force
(n = total number of muscles sampled for the
calculation of the mean MU numbers; n' = total number
of MUs sampled for the calculation of the mean MU twitch forces).
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MU enlargement by sprouting in extensively denervated muscles
Avulsion of L4 spinal roots axotomized >80% of the TA
motoneurons, and avulsion of L5 spinal roots axotomized >80% of the MG motoneurons. After partial denervation, 3-20 MUs remained (>80% partial denervation) in the TA and MG muscles (MU = 7 ± 2 in
both muscles) as compared with 133 ± 14 and 88 ± 8 MUs in
contralateral control TA and MG muscles, respectively. In contrast to
the insignificant difference between mean MU twitch forces in the
contralateral control muscles, the mean twitch forces of the small
number of remaining MUs varied widely between partially denervated
muscles, as illustrated for the MG muscle in Figure
3. Although it is clear that the mean
forces were generally significantly higher than forces in the
contralateral control muscles, and that the average MU forces declined
dramatically after exercise (Fig. 3), the mean values of MUs sampled
from different rats varied widely from rat to rat. This variability is
readily understood by the fact that section of >80% of the motor
axons in one ventral root leaves behind <20% of the motor axons in
the remaining intact ventral root. These remaining axons previously
supplied MUs that developed forces randomly distributed within the
10-fold range of forces in the normally innervated muscle (Fig.
4). In view of this distribution, comparisons of mean force values after partial denervation do not
adequately reflect the MU population. Collation of the few MU data from
different rats in which muscles have been partially denervated provides
a means of better representing the normal distribution whether the
distribution is shown as the skewed distribution on arithmetic scales
(Fig. 4A) or as semilogarithmic scales (Fig. 4B). Note how the collated distributions for the
partially denervated muscles are similar to the normal distributions,
as demonstrated previously for larger MU samples in cat muscles (Rafuse
et al., 1992 ). The scatter and differences between the mean twitch
forces of the few remaining MUs in the extensively partially denervated muscles demonstrate the wide variability between animals in the distribution of the MU forces in the L4 and L5 roots through which the
motor axons exit the spinal cord (Fig. 3). Hence, the population of MUs
in the partially denervated muscles is better represented by sampling
many MUs from several animals for collation and direct comparison with
the collated population of MU twitch forces from the control muscles,
as shown in Figure 4. The distributions of MU forces in the
contralateral control and partially denervated muscles were skewed to
the left with more small force MUs than large (Fig.
4A). The distributions were normalized on
semilogarithmic scales (Fig. 4B). Comparisons between
the distributions of normal and partially denervated muscles are very
clearly represented by cumulative frequency histograms on
semilogarithmic scales (Fig. 4C). A parallel shift in the
distributions, after partial denervation, denotes the enlargement of
all MUs after partial denervation, as shown previously for populations
of MUs sampled from single animals (Rafuse et al., 1992 ).

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Figure 3.
Average MU twitch force for MG muscle is plotted
as a function of the MU number for partially denervated muscles that
experienced caged activity ( ) and running exercise ( ), as
compared with contralateral control muscles ( ).
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Figure 4.
Percentage histograms of the distributions of MU
twitch forces in partially denervated MG muscle (PD) as
compared with contralateral control (Con) MG muscle. The
twitch force is plotted on a linear scale (A) and
a logarithmic scale (B, C), and the
distribution is designated as the percentage of total in
A and B and as cumulative percentage in
C. Note that the MU force distributions are skewed to
the left on linear scales (A) in
contrast to a more normal distribution on semilogarithmic scales
(B). The enlarged twitch forces in the partially
denervated muscles are shifted in parallel to the forces of the
contralateral control muscles in the cumulative percentage histograms
on semilogarithmic scales. This demonstrates that all MUs were enlarged
to the same extent after partial denervation.
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The <20% motoneurons that innervated the extensively denervated
muscles enlarged their MU size by sprouting to compensate for the
motoneuron loss. MU twitch forces, after normalization for muscle fiber
CSAs (Table 1), increased approximately
four- to fivefold on average in these extensively denervated muscles that experienced normal caged activity (Fig.
5A,B).
The parallel right-hand shift in the cumulative frequency histograms
after partial denervation indicates that all MUs in the population
enlarged by the same factor as shown previously in cat partially
denervated MG muscles (Rafuse et al., 1992 ).
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Table 1.
Summary of mean ± SE of muscle fiber CSA in TA, MG,
PL, and SOL muscles in control, partially denervated muscles in rats
experiencing normal caged activity (PD), partially denervated muscles
after running exercise (PD + exercise), and partially denervated
muscles with FES (PD + FES)
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Figure 5.
Cumulative frequency histograms of distributions
of MU twitch force after normalization for muscle fiber CSAs in
partially denervated TA (A),
MG (B), PL
(C), and SOL
(D) muscles [partial denervation
(PD, )] as compared with contralateral normally
innervated muscles (Control, ) from rats that
experienced normal caged activity without either FES or running
exercise on wheels. The cumulative distribution of MU twitch forces was
plotted on a semilogarithmic scale with the result that logarithmic
values of force are more normally distributed. In TA and MG muscles in
which PD was >80%, MU twitch forces were significantly larger than
control as shown by the significant rightward shift of the MU twitch
force distributions (p < 0.001). The shift
in the MU twitch force distributions was much less but significant
(p < 0.01) for moderately denervated
(PD < 80%) PL and SOL muscles. For TA,
n' = 160 (Control) and
n' = 45 (PD); for MG,
n' = 199 (Control) and
n' = 50 (PD); for PL,
n' = 76 (Control) and
n' = 204 (PD); for SOL,
n' = 57 (Control) and
n' = 169 (PD) (n = total number of muscles sampled for the calculation of the mean MU
numbers; n' = total number of MUs sampled for MU twitch
force measurement).
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Comparisons of MU twitch forces in normal and partially denervated
muscles that experienced normal caged activity were made after
correcting for changes in muscle fiber CSAs. This is because meaningful
comparisons of MU size in terms of IRs could be made, given that
specific force of muscle fiber is a small contributing factor
(Tötösy de Zepetnek et al., 1992a ; Fu and Gordon,
1995a ,b ).
MU enlargement by sprouting in moderately denervated muscles
PL and SOL muscles suffered less severe partial denervation. MU
twitch forces in PL and SOL muscles, which experienced normal caged
activity, increased approximately twofold after moderate partial
denervation (Fig. 5C,D), and the rightward shift
of distribution was much less than that for the partially denervated TA
and MG muscles (Fig. 5A,B).
Nevertheless, the MU twitch forces in the partially denervated PL and
SOL muscles, after normalization for muscle fiber CSAs (Table 1), were
statistically higher as compared with control. These results are
consistent with previous studies of partially denervated muscles in
which significant increases in MU size were not always detected until
MU number was reduced below 50% of normal (Rafuse et al., 1992 ).
Variability among animals in the extent of partial denervation may be a
contributing factor.
Neural activity reduces MU enlargement in extensively
denervated muscles
Effects of running exercise (average 1757 ± 310 m/d) or FES
(20 Hz, 8 hr daily) on sprouting were examined in the extensively denervated TA and MG muscles. Increased neuromuscular activity severely
reduced MU enlargement in the extensively denervated but not the
moderately denervated muscles. Avulsion of L4 or L5 spinal roots
resulted in significant reduction in the numbers of MUs in all
experimental groups of partially denervated TA and MG muscles (Figs.
5A,B,
6). There were no significant differences in the number of MUs between the groups of caged activity, running exercise, and FES for both extensively denervated TA and MG muscles. The cumulative distribution histograms were shifted far to the left of
the partially denervated TA and MG muscles in rats that experienced
normal caged activity.

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Figure 6.
Cumulative frequency histograms of MU twitch force
distributions after normalization for CSAs in partially denervated TA
(A, C) and MG (B,
D) muscles of rats experiencing normal caged activity
(Control, ) as compared with partially denervated
muscles after running exercise (Exercise,
A, B, ) and partially denervated
muscles with FES (FES, C,
D, ). The dramatic effect of increased neuromuscular
activity in reducing MU enlargement was seen as a shift in cumulative
MU force distributions to the left of the extensively denervated TA and
MG muscles in rats that experienced normal caged activity
(p < 0.05). For TA,
n' = 45 (Caged), n' = 34 (Exercise), and n' = 18 (FES); for MG, n' = 50 (Caged), n' = 54 (Exercise), and n' = 69 (FES) (n = total number of muscles
sampled for the calculation of the mean MU numbers; n' = total number of MUs sampled for MU twitch force measurement).
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More detailed analysis of the cumulative frequency histograms, which
compare MUs from high and normal levels of daily activity, showed that
the detrimental effect of neuromuscular activity in reducing MU size
was most pronounced for the smaller MUs and less so for the MUs that
developed larger forces. Hence the sizes of the MUs in the extensively
denervated TA and MG muscles, which developed forces of <60-80 mN
under the normal control condition of "caged" activity, were either
reduced considerably more than the larger MUs after exercise (Fig.
6A,B) or even enlarged after FES
(Fig. 6C,D). The enlargement may indicate a small
beneficial effect of activity on the largest MUs. One may argue that
the larger MUs in partially denervated muscles might not be recruited during running exercise and therefore were spared from the detrimental effect of activity. This argument may seem likely, especially when one
considers the study of Walmsley et al. (1978) in which treadmill
locomotion required only 10-20% of the maximal force output of the MU
pool in the cat MG muscle and this relatively low force output was
normally provided by slow and fatigued resistant units. In this study,
however, denervation of TA and MG muscles was very extensive. Less than
20% of MUs remained in these muscles after extensive denervation. This
remaining small number of MUs was likely recruited during running
exercise. Most importantly, the sparing effect of the larger MUs was
also evident in all partially denervated muscles with FES (Fig.
6C,D), which recruits all MUs. Given that
low-threshold slow and fatigue-resistant units are involved in postural
maintenance and locomotion (Burke, 1981 ), smaller MUs might very well
be maximally active in the partially denervated muscles even during
normal level activity (normal caged activity). Further involvement of
these relatively small units in the increased level activity (running
exercise or FES) might have overloaded the sprouting units and
therefore resulted in reduction of MU enlargement. Furthermore, because
the levels of running exercise for individual rats were similar, the
possibility that different amounts of running exercise accounted for
the differential effects on different MU types was discarded.
Our findings that activity might even promote MU enlargement in the
larger MUs are consistent with the findings of Einsiedel and Luff
(1994) . In their study of the effect of 2 week treadmill walking on
sprouting in partially denervated MG muscle suggested that there was a
preferential effect of treadmill running exercise on promoting MU
enlargement of fast-fatigable and fast-intermediate units on the basis
of comparisons of mean MU forces in different MU types that were
distinguished by fatigability test. However, because activity alters MU
type to more fatigue-resistant MUs (Pette and Vrbova, 1992 ), analysis
in terms of MU size, as in the present study, rather than type allows
the differences in MU enlargement of different unit types to be
detected more readily.
In summary, MU twitch force reasonably reflects IR after
normalization for muscle fiber CSA (Table 1), as explained earlier. Therefore, the detrimental effect of increased neuromuscular activity on MU enlargement in extensively denervated TA and MG muscles could not
be accounted for by the reduced muscle fiber size. The remaining effect
therefore must be caused by a reduction in sprouting.
Effect of neural activity on MU enlargement in moderately
denervated muscles
For the moderately denervated PL and SOL, increased neuromuscular
activity by either running exercise (average 1757 ± 310 m/d) or
FES (20 Hz, 8 hr daily) resulted in a small but significant decrease in
MU size in PL muscle (Fig.
7A,C),
but the effect was not detected in SOL muscle (Fig.
7B,D). The small shift of the largest MUs to even higher forces seen in the extensively denervated TA
and MG muscles was also evident in these moderately denervated muscles
(Fig. 7).

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Figure 7.
Cumulative frequency histograms of MU twitch force
distributions in partially denervated PL
(A, C) and SOL
(B, D) muscles of rats experiencing
normal caged activity (Control, ) as compared with
partially denervated muscles after running exercise
(Exercise, A, B, ) and
partially denervated muscles with FES (FES,
C, D, ). There was a small but
significant shift in cumulative MU force distributions, after exercise
or FES, to the left of the moderately denervated PL muscle in rats that
experienced normal caged activity (p < 0.01). For moderately denervated SOL muscle, there were no significant
differences in the MU twitch force distribution between the caged and
activity groups. For PL, n' = 204 (Caged), n' = 139 (Exercise), and n' = 196 (FES); for SOL, n' = 169 (Caged), n' = 79 (Exercise), and n' = 100 (FES) (n = total number of muscles
sampled for the calculation of the mean MU numbers; n' = total number of MUs sampled for MU twitch force measurement).
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Sprouting and effect of increased neuromuscular activity in
moderately denervated muscles
Using combined Ag/AChE histochemical staining, three different
types of collateral sprouts were examined in this study. A single
axonal outgrowth, for example, originated from the node of Ranvier
(Fig. 8A) (intranodal
sprout) or preterminal region (Fig. 8B) (preterminal
sprout). Another example is shown in Figure 8C. A single
axonal outgrowth originated from the endplate area (Fig. 8C)
(ultraterminal sprout). There was usually only one type of sprout per
axon in moderately denervated muscle, with few exceptions, such as the
examples in Figure 8D. An ultraterminal sprout
originated from the endplate region of the same axon from whence an
intranodal sprout originated. We also occasionally observed that many
intranodal sprouts originated from a single axon (Fig.
8E).

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Figure 8.
Photomicrographs of three different types of
collateral sprouts: intranodal (A), preterminal
(B), and ultraterminal (C)
sprouts, visualized with combined Ag/AChE histochemical staining. In
some cases, different collateral sprouts occurred in combination for
the same axon (D, E). Arrows indicate
collateral sprouts.
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In normal PL muscle, the typical pattern of innervation is shown in
Figure 9, A and E.
The combined Ag/AChE histochemical staining on 100-µm-thick cryostat
longitudinal sections revealed, at high magnification (Fig.
9E), an intramuscular nerve trunk composed of several axons
branching down into single axons that innervated single motor
endplates.

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Figure 9.
Low (A-D) and higher
(E-H) power combined Ag/AChE histochemical
photomicrographs of 100-µm-thick cryostat longitudinal sections of
control (A, E), moderately denervated
(PD < 75%) after normal caged activity (B,
F), running exercise (C,
G), and FES (D, H).
In normal PL muscle, single endplates were innervated by single axons.
For PD <75%, denervated endplates were reinnervated by collateral
sprouts (arrows). There were no visual differences in
branching and axonal sprouting after running exercise and FES. Shown
are two intranodal sprouts and one ultraterminal sprout in
F, two intranodal sprouts in G, and four
intranodal sprouts in H. Arrows indicate
collateral sprouts.
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As compared with normal PL muscle (Fig.
9A,E), we found that moderately
denervated PL muscle (<75% partial denervation) contained considerable numbers of collateral sprouts (Fig.
9B,F). Nevertheless, there
were some free endplates at 1 month. These collateral sprouts appeared
to be mainly intranodal sprouts. The number and size of intramuscular
nerve trunks were decreased, and the nerve branches became relatively
longer consequent to the loss of axons and the extension of collateral
sprouts to denervated endplates, respectively.
Increased neuromuscular activity by either running exercise (average
1757 ± 310 m/d) or FES (20 Hz, 8 hr daily) did not appear to
affect the extent of axonal branching or sprouting in moderately denervated PL muscles (Fig.
9C,D,G,H).
We observed that the incidence of collateral sprouts and free endplates
were comparable in both exercised muscles and muscles that experienced
normal caged activity.
Quantitation of the number of collateral sprouts in
moderately denervated muscles
Because (1) there were no significant differences in the
relative proportion of different sprout types between PL and SOL muscles and (2) we obtained a similar range of the extent of
partial denervation for both partially denervated PL and SOL muscles in each experimental group, we therefore grouped and discussed the results
from PL and SOL muscles together in each experimental group.
The number of collateral sprouts and free endplates in normally
innervated and partially denervated PL and SOL muscles and the effects
of exercise and FES are shown in Figure
10. The few collateral sprouts (~3%)
(Fig. 10A) present in normal muscles were also
reported in the study of Eberstein and Pachter (1992) . However, they
were not the collateral sprouts involved in compensatory sprouting to reinnervate denervated endplates in partially denervated muscles. They were simply axonal branches involved in normal
innervation in normal muscles; however, under the examining criteria
used in this study, this normal branching could not be distinguished from the compensatory sprouting. The 10% free endplates found in the
normal muscles (Fig. 10B) were simply caused by the
artifactual effects of muscle sectioning.

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Figure 10.
Mean (±SE) of number of collateral sprouts per
100 innervated endplates (A) and free endplates
per 100 endplates (B) of normal (open
bars) and moderately denervated (filled
bars) PL and SOL muscles after normal caged activity, running
exercise, and FES. For PD <75%, the number of both collateral sprouts
and free endplates was significantly increased as compared with control
(*p < 0.0001) (n = total
number of muscles sampled).
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After moderate denervation (<75% partial denervation), the number of
collateral sprouts increased significantly. Nevertheless, these failed
to compensate for the loss of motoneurons as shown by the significantly
higher number of free endplates. The small but significant reduction in
MU forces after running exercise or FES (Fig.
7A,C) was not detected as
significant fewer sprouts or more free endplates in the small sample of
PL and SOL muscles. Hence, the combined data of sprout counts of PL and
SOL shown in Figure 10 were not statistically significant.
Effect of increased neuromuscular activity on sprouting in
extensively denervated muscles
To obtain histochemical data to directly complement the
electrophysiological evidence in extensive denervated muscles of the inhibitory effect of increased neuromuscular activity on sprouting, we
extensively denervated TA muscles by avulsion of L4 spinal roots,
subjected the rats to either normal caged activity or running exercise
(8 hr daily), and removed and prepared TA muscle for Ag/AChE
histochemical staining. In the extensively denervated TA muscle,
sprouting was extensive (Fig.
11A-C).
Despite the extensive sprouting, the proportion of free endplates
(identified as endplates without axonal attachments) was very high
(49%) because of the limited capacity for sprouting and hence
incomplete reinnervation of denervated endplates. Of the 51%
innervated endplates, ~41% of them were innervated by collateral
sprouts. Extensively denervated TA muscle, after 4 week running
exercise (1569 ± 278 m/d), appeared to contain very few
collateral sprouts and a very high number of free endplates, as
compared with those without exercise (Fig. 11D-F). The number of endplates
innervated by sprouts was dramatically reduced from ~41 to ~5%
(Fig. 12A), and the
number of free endplates increased correspondingly (Fig.
12B). Also shown in Figure 11, D and
F, were many vacant nerve sheaths caused by the extensive loss of motor axons and the inhibitory effects of exercise on sprouting. Figure 11F clearly demonstrates that the
endplates did not have axonal attachments and that the number of free
endplates was higher than in the muscles that experienced normal caged
activity. Both the electrophysiological and histochemical results show
that the effects of increased neuromuscular activity can be
demonstrated at both the level of nerve innervation of endplates and
the recording of MU forces.

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Figure 11.
Three levels of magnification (low:
A, D; high: B,
E; higher: C, F) of
combined Ag/AChE histochemical photomicrographs of 100-µm-thick
cryostat longitudinal sections of extensively denervated TA muscles
with normal caged activity (A-C) and after
running exercise (D-F). Extensively denervated
TA muscles demonstrated extensive collateral sprouting for normal caged
activity as designated by filled arrows in
A-C. In contrast, the partially
denervated muscles after running exercise contained almost no sign of
collateral sprouts but contained very high numbers of free endplates,
as identified by open arrows
(D-F). Rather, the exercised muscles contained
many vacant nerve sheaths (arrowheads) containing no
Ag-stained axons.
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Figure 12.
Mean (±SE) of number of collateral sprouts per
100 innervated endplates (A) and free endplates
per endplates (B) of extensively denervated TA
muscle after normal caged activity (filled bars)
and running exercise (hatched bars)
(n = total number of muscles sampled).
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DISCUSSION |
The results of this study demonstrate that increased neuromuscular
activity during the acute phase of sprouting compromises sprouting,
particularly in extensively denervated muscles.
Detrimental effect of increased neuromuscular activity on MU
enlargement and sprouting after extensive denervation but not moderate
denervation
The striking finding of the present study that the detrimental
effect of increased neuromuscular activity of reducing MU enlargement was evident largely in extensively denervated muscles may account for
the contradictory findings in previous studies (Gardiner et al., 1984 ;
Gardiner and Faltus, 1986 ; Michel and Gardiner, 1989 ; Seburn and
Gardiner, 1996 ). The extent of partial denervation was not established
directly in these studies, but on average the extent of partial
denervation in the muscles studied, primarily the PL and SOL muscles,
is ~50%. This moderate extent of partial denervation might be below
the limits of detection of inhibitory effects of activity. The
variability between animals in the extent of partial denervation makes
it very difficult to detect any definitive effect of activity on mean
MU size, particularly in the previous experiments in which the extent
of partial denervation was not evaluated or quantitated. A twofold
increase in MU size is difficult to detect electrophysiologically
(Rafuse et al., 1992 ) and morphometrically (Brown et al., 1980 ),
although a significant enlargement was noted for the whole MU
population (Fig. 5). The effects of activity would be even more
difficult to detect by average values that were used in most of those
previous studies. Large samples of MUs are especially important when
all MUs in partially denervated muscles are not affected similarly. As
seen in Figures 6 and 7, it was evident in all four types of partially
denervated muscles that increased neuromuscular activity was more
detrimental to the smaller and slower MUs and that there was an
apparent sparing of the larger MUs. It is important to take into
account the effect of denervation/reinnervation and neuromuscular
activity on muscle fiber size, which was ignored in many of those
previous studies. MU force is the product of the number,
cross-sectional area, and specific force of muscle fibers innervated by
a motoneuron, i.e., IR, CSA, and specific force. MU force depends on
both IR and CSA and reasonably reflects IR and therefore sprouting,
only if muscle fiber CSA is taken into account. Because specific force
does not change after reinnervation (Tötösy de Zepetnek et
al., 1992a ; Fu and Gordon, 1995a ,b ), MU force corrected for muscle
fiber CSA therefore provides a reasonable average measurement of MU enlargement.
Proposed mechanisms for the detrimental effect of increased
neuromuscular activity on sprouting
The detrimental effects of increased neuromuscular activity in
reducing MU enlargement in partially denervated muscles may be
accounted for by the failure of (1) newly formed synaptic contacts to
mature or (2) axonal sprouts to contact denervated endplates, or
both. The former possibility is supported by evidence from studies of muscle reinnervation after nerve crush showed that synaptic
maturation was retarded in rat muscles by increasing motor activity via
a daily swimming regime of 3-4 hr/d for 35 d (Gutmann and
Jakoubek, 1963 ) and in rat lateral gastrocnemius muscles by 30 d
treadmill running (Soucy et al., 1996 ). The hyperactive gastrocnemius
muscles exhibited "tetanic fade" phenomenon, indicating that the
activity had delayed the maturation of the synapses (Soucy et al.,
1996 ).
The detrimental effects of increased neuromuscular activity in reducing
MU enlargement in partially denervated muscles is more likely to be
accounted for by the second possibility, namely that axonal sprouts
fail to contact denervated endplates. A number of immunohistochemical
studies have demonstrated that terminal Schwann cells at both
innervated and denervated endplates induce and guide collateral sprouts
by forming extended processes that bridge between the endplates
(Reynolds and Woolf, 1992 ; Son and Thompson, 1995a ,b ; Son et al., 1996 ;
Thompson and Kopp, 1996 ). The detrimental effects of increased
neuromuscular activity in reducing axonal sprouting may arise
indirectly from the inhibitory effects of increased activity on the
ability of the terminal Schwann cell processes to make bridges between
innervated and denervated endplates, and in turn, for the axonal
sprouts to make contact with the denervated endplates. Striking
evidence supporting this view comes from the recent studies of Love et
al. (1997) and Tam and Gordon (1998) . Love and colleagues (1997)
reported that direct muscle stimulation prohibited bridge formation of
terminal Schwann cell processes and thereby reduced axonal sprouting in
SOL muscle 7 d after partial denervation. Studies of extensively
denervated TA muscle also showed that the increased neuromuscular
activity associated with running exercise did not affect formation of
the Schwann cell processes; rather, it significantly reduced the
bridging between endplates during the first week of collateral
sprouting and, in turn, collateral sprouts at early time points over a
4 week period (Tam and Gordon, 1998 ). Interestingly, increased
neuromuscular activity (Tam and Gordon, 1998 ) and direct muscle
stimulation (Love et al., 1997 ) inhibited bridge formation and, in
turn, axonal sprouting. In both cases, it was shown that the
perisynaptic Schwann cells continued to make processes, but they failed
to bridge between the denervated and innervated junctions.
Terminal or perisynaptic Schwann cells express muscarinic acetylcholine
receptors that normally respond to ACh released from nerve
terminals by influx of calcium (Jahromi et al., 1992 ; Reist and Smith,
1992 ; Reynolds and Woolf, 1993 ; Lev-Ram and Ellisman, 1995 ) and
downregulation of glial fibrillary acidic protein (Georgiou et al.,
1999 ). In the absence of released ACh at the denervated endplates, the
perisynaptic Schwann cells would likely extend glial processes, which
bridge between the innervated and denervated endplates in partially
denervated muscles. It is possible that very high neuromuscular
activity at the innervated endplates might release sufficient ACh to
prevent the glial processes from effectively bridging between the
denervated and innervated endplates and thereby explain the reduction
in sprouting from the hyperactive nerve terminals.
In addition to the role of Schwann cells in providing physical guidance
to sprout growth, Schwann cells may also produce sprout-inducing substances. Hoffman (1950) first suggested that collateral sprouts were
guided to denervated endplates by some "elements" supplied by the
denervated Schwann cells in the vacant nerve sheaths in partially
denervated muscles. Since then, considerable evidence supporting this
view has become available from subsequent studies on the role of
non-neural cells of the distal nerve stumps and terminal Schwann cells
in producing sprout-inducing factors to attract regenerating axons
(David and Aguayo, 1985 ; Kuffler, 1987 ; Diaz and
Pécot-Dechavassine, 1990 ; Kuffler, 1994 ). In light of the
capacity of the neurotrophic factor, ciliary neurotrophic factor
(Gurney et al., 1992 ; Kwon and Gurney, 1994 ; Siegel and English, 1997 ),
to induce sprouting in normally innervated muscles, it is possible that
expression of ciliary neurotrophic factor on partial denervation is
altered and may thereby induce sprouting. Neuromuscular activity might
somehow interfere with the ability of intact axons to respond to the
sprouting stimuli.
Another source of sprouting stimuli is the denervated inactive muscle
fibers (Brown et al., 1978a ,b , 1980 , 1981 ; Slack and Pockett, 1981 ;
Pockett and Slack, 1982 ; Keynes et al., 1983 ; Gurney, 1984 ; Gurney et
al., 1986 ; Kuffler, 1989 ; Rassendren et al., 1992 ; Kuffler and Luethi,
1993 ). Suggested sprouting factors released from inactive muscle fibers
include insulin-like growth factors (Caroni and Grandes, 1990 ; Thompson
and Kopp, 1996 ), neural cell adhesion molecules (Gurney et al., 1986 ),
and neurocrescin (Nishimune et al., 1997 ). It has been shown that
restoration of muscle activity by direct muscle stimulation inhibits
axonal sprouting in paralyzed (Brown et al., 1977 , 1980 ) and partially
denervated (Brown and Ironton, 1977 ; Brown and Holland, 1979 ) muscles.
The possibilities are that the direct muscle stimulation reduces the
availability of sprout-producing factors from denervated muscle fibers
and that, by stimulation of the intramuscular nerves, the stimulation might reduce the ability of the intramuscular nerves to sprout in
response to the sprout-producing factors. Hence, the increased neuromuscular activity by the running exercise and FES in our present
study could alter the ability of the Schwann cells at the innervated
endplates to respond to the sprout-inducing factors from inactive
muscle fibers and thereby reduce axonal sprouting.
Finally, levels of calcium in the nerve terminals may also play a role
because the high intracellular calcium level induced by electrical
stimulation and calcium ionophores results in cessation of nerve
outgrowth (Kater and Mills, 1991 ; Rehder and Kater, 1992 ). Increased
neuromuscular activity might overload sprout terminals with calcium,
resulting in reduction of sprouting.
The aforementioned mechanisms are mostly postulated and yet to be
proven. Nonetheless, one must consider these mechanisms in relationship
to the differential detrimental effects of activity relative to the
size of the MUs. Although we might predict that the mechanisms may be
the same for all MUs, our findings demonstrate a selective effect of
activity on the smallest as opposed to the largest MUs. In light of
recent findings that the normal relationship between size of the
motoneurons and the number of muscle fibers that they reinnervate was
reestablished even under conditions in which all regenerating
motoneurons and reinnervated MUs were subject to the same electrical
activity (Gordon et al., 1999 ), it is apparent that the number of
muscle fibers per motoneuron varies with motoneuron size rather than
neuromuscular activity. Hence, the findings in this study that exercise
or electrical activity reduced sprouting more in the smaller than the
larger MUs reflect a balance between the intrinsic size-dependent
capacity of motoneurons to enlarge their MUs by sprouting and the
inhibitory effects of activity in limiting this sprouting.
Conclusions
Using four functionally different muscles and both
electrophysiological and histochemical techniques, we, in the present
studies, have resolved the controversial findings of previous studies
on the effect of activity on sprouting and have been able to generalize the effect of increased neuromuscular activity in reducing MU enlargement and sprouting. The detrimental effect of increased neuromuscular activity in reducing MU enlargement and sprouting depends
on the extent of partial denervation of muscles. Increased neuromuscular activity significantly reduced MU enlargement and sprouting primarily in extensively denervated muscles where only <20%
of intact MUs remained. We have demonstrated that normal physiological
activity of sprouting motoneurons is conducive for MU enlargement
during the acute phase of sprouting, whereas nonphysiological activity
can be detrimental. The findings of the present studies indicate that
increased neuromuscular activity is not recommended as
rehabilitation immediately after motoneuron injury or in the early
stages of motoneuron disease.
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FOOTNOTES |
Received April 26, 2000; revised Oct. 13, 2000; accepted Oct. 23, 2000.
This work was supported by the Muscular Dystrophy Association of
Canada. We thank the Alberta Heritage Foundation of Medical Research
for supporting T.G. as a research scientist, and the Rick Hansen Man in
Motion Legacy Fund and Alberta Heritage Foundation Medical Research for
supporting S.L.T. as a research fellow. This work partially fulfilled
the requirements for S.L.T.'s M.Sc. thesis.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Tessa Gordon, Division of
Neuroscience, 525 Heritage Medical Research Center, Faculty of
Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2S2, Canada. E-mail: tessa.gordon{at}ualberta.ca.
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