PMID: 526018Jan 1, 1979Paper

Development of cutaneous innervation in the chick: ultrastructural and quantitative analysis (author's transl)

Archives d'anatomie microscopique et de morphologie expérimentale
J M Verna, R Saxod

Abstract

In the chick, at the thoracic level, the dorsal branches of spinal nerves form at 4 days of incubation (stage 25) and reach the skin between 5 1/2 and 6 days (stages 28-29). At 6 days, the growing nervous peripheral processes ("axons") form large bundles (200-1,000 fibers). At 10 days, young Schwann cells divide the bundles into groups of axons. The perineurium and endoneurium differentiate between 10 and 14 days (but epineurium is formed after hatching). At 14 days of incubation, the adult pattern of cutaneous innervation is established. At this same stage, myelogenesis begins but develops mainly after hatching : 1% of the axons is myelinated at 16 days of incubation, 4% at hatching, 40% in 6-week old chickens and 60% in adults. Thus, less than 10% of myelinated axons of the adult are already myelinated at hatching. Two modes of myelogenesis were observed: 1) early myelination, starting in the embryo around axons measuring about 1 micrometer in diameter: 2) delayed myelination, occurring in the older chickens after an increase in axon diameter. These observations suggest that there is, in the development of chick skin innervation, a critical stage (14-15 days of incubation) apparently corresponding to the stabilization of cuta...Continue Reading

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