Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 6, 764-773, Copyright © 1986 by Society for Neuroscience
Reinnervation of the extraocular muscles in goldfish is nonselective
SS Scherer
The selectivity of axonal regeneration to the extraocular muscles in
teleosts has been reinvestigated by mapping, with retrogradely transported
HRP, the motor pools of the muscles innervated by the oculomotor nerve. In
normal goldfish, the motoneurons of the superior rectus, inferior rectus,
and inferior oblique muscles formed discrete, nonoverlapping motor pools;
the motor pool of the medial rectus muscle overlapped with those of the
inferior oblique and inferior rectus muscles. In fish whose oculomotor
nerve had regenerated (after intracranial transection), in contrast, many
motoneurons in other, inappropriate motor pools reinnervated the superior
rectus and inferior oblique muscles (the only muscles examined in lesioned
animals). Furthermore, these inappropriate motoneurons continued to project
to these muscles for at least 1 year. The oculomotor nerve and its
molecular branches were examined by light and electron microscopy to
determine the pathway by which axons regenerated to their muscles. Axons
regenerated within the basal laminae of Schwann cells, which persisted in
the distal nerve-stump after a lesion. After labeling the inferior oblique
nerve with HRP in regenerated nerves, there were labeled axons in all of
the muscular branches; this indicates that regenerating axons branched,
which was confirmed by finding an increased number of myelinated axons in
other, regenerated inferior oblique nerves. Thus, different branches of the
same axons sometimes reinnervated different muscles. These results
demonstrate that regenerating axons in the oculomotor nerve are misdirected
to inappropriate muscles, and do not selectively reinnervate individual
muscles, as had been previously suggested (Sperry and Arora, 1965).