Abstract
The calf muscles of the rat hindlimb are composed of smaller entities, called neuromuscular compartments, which are the territories of muscle innervated by a single, naturally occurring primary (first-order) muscle nerve branch. While it is quite clear that a precise connectivity exists very early in development between motoneuron pools and individual muscles, the mechanisms responsible for producing the adult pattern of compartmental innervation are unknown. This study uses intracellular recording techniques to demonstrate that neuromuscular compartments are essentially established at birth and that postnatal synapse elimination has little role in establishing neuromuscular compartments. Our results demonstrate the existence of a small number of cross-compartmental connections in neonates which are not present in adults. Examining the removal of these cross-compartmental connections in both normal muscles and in muscles that have had synapse elimination delayed by tenotomy reveals that the synapses responsible for this innervation are eliminated in a selective manner.
