Neural Regeneration Research (Jan 2022)

Effects of delayed repair of peripheral nerve injury on the spatial distribution of motor endplates in target muscle

  • Dong-Dong Li,
  • Jin Deng,
  • Bo Jin,
  • Shuai Han,
  • Xin-Yi Gu,
  • Xue-Feng Zhou,
  • Xiao-Feng Yin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/1673-5374.317990
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 2
pp. 459 – 464

Abstract

Read online

Motor endplates (MEPs) are important sites of information exchange between motor neurons and skeletal muscle, and are distributed in an organized pattern of lamellae in the muscle. Delayed repair of peripheral nerve injury typically results in unsatisfactory functional recovery because of MEP degeneration. In this study, the mouse tibial nerve was transected and repaired with a biodegradable chitin conduit, immediately following or 1 or 3 months after the injury. Fluorescent α-bungarotoxin was injected to label MEPs. Tissue optical clearing combined with light-sheet microscopy revealed that MEPs were distributed in an organized pattern of lamellae in skeletal muscle after delayed repair for 1 and 3 months. However, the total number of MEPs, the number of MEPs per lamellar cluster, and the maturation of single MEPs in gastrocnemius muscle gradually decreased with increasing denervation time. These findings suggest that delayed repair can restore the spatial distribution of MEPs, but it has an adverse effect on the homogeneity of MEPs in the lamellar clusters and the total number of MEPs in the target muscle. The study procedures were approved by the Animal Ethics Committee of the Peking University People’s Hospital (approval No. 2019PHC015) on April 8, 2019.

Keywords