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Departments of 1 Physiology and of 2 Pediatrics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada T6G 2S2
In this
overview, we outline what is known regarding the key developmental
stages of phrenic nerve and diaphragm formation in perinatal rats.
These developmental events include the following. Cervical axons emerge
from the spinal cord during embryonic (E) day
11. At ~E12.5, phrenic and brachial axons from the
cervical segments merge at the brachial plexi. Subsequently, the two
populations diverge as phrenic axons continue to grow ventrally toward
the diaphragmatic primordium and brachial axons turn laterally to grow
into the limb bud. A few pioneer axons extend ahead of the majority of
the phrenic axonal population and migrate along a well-defined track
toward the primordial diaphragm, which they reach by E13.5. The
primordial diaphragmatic muscle arises from the pleuroperitoneal fold,
a triangular protrusion of the body wall composed of the fusion of the
primordial pleuroperitoneal and pleuropericardial tissues. The phrenic
nerve initiates branching within the diaphragm at ~E14, when
myoblasts in the region of contact with the phrenic nerve begin to fuse
and form distinct primary myotubes. As the nerve migrates through the
various sectors of the diaphragm, myoblasts along the nerve's path
begin to fuse and form additional myotubes. The phrenic nerve
intramuscular branching and concomitant diaphragmatic myotube formation
continue to progress up until E17, at which time the mature pattern of innervation and muscle architecture are approximated. E17 is also the
time of the commencement of inspiratory drive transmission to phrenic
motoneurons (PMNs) and the arrival of phrenic afferents to the
motoneuron pool. During the period spanning from E17 to birth
(gestation period of ~21 days), there is dramatic change in PMN
morphology as the dendritic branching is rearranged into the
rostrocaudal bundling characteristic of mature PMNs. This period is
also a time of significant changes in PMN passive membrane properties,
action-potential characteristics, and firing properties.
axon outgrowth; myogenesis; respiration
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