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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Synaptogenesis in chick paravertebral sympathetic ganglia: a morphometric analysis.

Synaptogenesis was studied in lumbar sympathetic ganglia of chicken by light and electron microscopic morphometric methods. At 10 days in ovo, fewer than 1% of the adult number of synapses are present. The total numbers of synapses and of synaptic vesicles per ganglion increase progressively with age; however, the majority of both are formed after 30 days after hatching. The average number of synaptic vesicles per synapse increases several fold after hatching. The numbers of synapses and of synaptic vesicles per ganglion increase roughly in concert with biochemical markers of presynaptic development (activity of choline acetyltransferase and levels of acetylcholine) as well as postsynaptic development (tyrosine hydroxylase; based on biochemical data reported elsewhere). The amount of acetylcholine and activity of choline acetyltransferase per synaptic vesicle at 10 days in ovo are 8 and 27 times the corresponding adult values. By 1 day after hatching, these ratios have fallen to near adult levels. These data are consistent with the early presence of cholinergic neuroblasts, as suggested by others, and suggest further that such cholinergic neuroblasts are eliminated, or their cholinergic properties suppressed, before hatching.[1]

References

  1. Synaptogenesis in chick paravertebral sympathetic ganglia: a morphometric analysis. Hruschak, K.A., Friedrich, V.L., Giacobini, E. Brain Res. (1982) [Pubmed]
 
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