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Reconstructing the pathway of the tensor veli palatini motor nerve during early mouse development
The motor axons innervating the tensor veli palatini (TVP) navigate a long distance from the trigeminal motor nucleus to their target. The pathway and time course of the TVP motor nerve during this navigation process remain poorly understood. The aim of this study was to elucidate the peripheral dev...
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Published in: | Anatomy and Embryology 2000-04, Vol.201 (4), p.235-244 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The motor axons innervating the tensor veli palatini (TVP) navigate a long distance from the trigeminal motor nucleus to their target. The pathway and time course of the TVP motor nerve during this navigation process remain poorly understood. The aim of this study was to elucidate the peripheral development of the TVP motor nerve, and to confirm when the morphological relationship is established between the nerve and target muscle progenitors. Using immunohistochemistry, carbocyanine fluorescent labeling, and computerized three-dimensional image-reconstruction methods, we demonstrated the development of the TVP motor nerve in mouse embryos. Further, the morphological relationship between the extending mandibular nerve and myogenic cells stained for MyoD1 was examined. The peripheral pathfinding of the TVP motor nerve was divided into three continuous stages: (1) the earliest trigeminal motor axons leave the metencephalon and enter the primordium of the trigeminal ganglion at E9.5, when MyoD1-positive cells can already be detected in the mesenchymal core of the mandibular arch; (2) converging with the sensory root, the trigeminal motor root excites the trigeminal ganglion and begins to approach the mandibular muscle precursors at E10.5; (3) collateral branching occurs at E12.5. By E13.5, a nerve branch splits from the mandibular nerve to innervate the TVP, which appears as an individual muscle mass. These results suggest that the early process of mandibular motor nerve extension is correlated with the trigeminal ganglion cells, whereas when growing out of the ganglion, the mandibular nerve has a close relationship with target myogenic cells throughout the later process of pathway finding. |
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ISSN: | 0340-2061 1863-2653 1432-0568 0340-2061 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s004290050314 |