Abstract
To test the importance of glia during regeneration of mechanosensory neuron axons in the leech central nervous system, individual glial cells that ensheathed the axons were destroyed by intracellular protease injection. Recordings with intracellular microelectrodes showed that glial-desheathed axons re-established synaptic connections with their appropriate target cell, a motor neuron, as frequently and as selectively as control, glial-ensheathed axons. Intracellular staining with horseradish peroxidase showed that desheathed regenerating axons sprouted more than controls, and loss of the glial cell in some cases caused uninjured (intact) axons to sprout. Successful, accurate regeneration could occur whether axons grew along normal or along aberrant pathways. The distal stumps of some sensory axons severed from cell bodies and maintained in organ culture survived without their glial sheath for up to 3 weeks. These experiments show that, although loss of the glial cell affects sensory axon growth, the glial cell is not required for accurate axonal regeneration in the leech central nervous system.