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Keywords: denervation
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Journal Articles
Journal: Development
Development (2015) 142 (23): 4038–4048.
Published: 1 December 2015
...Peter C. D. Macpherson; Pershang Farshi; Daniel Goldman Muscle denervation resulting from injury, disease or aging results in impaired motor function. Restoring neuromuscular communication requires axonal regrowth and endplate reinnervation. Muscle activity inhibits the reinnervation of denervated...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
Journal: Development
Development (1989) 107 (4): 751–769.
Published: 1 December 1989
... destined to become slow muscle fibres began to lose expression of neonatal MHC. This pattern was further accentuated by E19, when many primary myotubes stained for only one of these two Isoforms. Chronic paralysis or denervation from E15 or earlier did not disrupt the normal sequence of maturation...
Journal Articles
Journal: Development
Development (1988) 104 (4): 557–564.
Published: 1 December 1988
... restricted to the postsynaptic membrane of innervated adult muscle, developing and denervated adult muscle contain AChRs at nonsynaptic regions. These nonsynaptic AChRs accumulate because the level of mRNA encoding AChR subunits increases in response to a loss of muscle cell electrical activity. We have...
Journal Articles
Journal: Development
Development (1987) 99 (2): 173–186.
Published: 1 February 1987
... synthesis and/or mitosis but sustained cell cycle activity and blastema development have not been achieved. Because dorsal root ganglia (DRG) implants are capable of promoting regeneration of denervated adult newt limbs (Kamrin & Singer, 1959), we have evaluated the DRG stimulation of regeneration...
Journal Articles
Journal: Development
Development (1985) 86 (1): 109–124.
Published: 1 April 1985
... by limb tissues; and the timing of axon outgrowth. Sensory ganglia from 7-day-old chick embryos were grafted into younger host embryo wing buds which had been previously denervated. The resultant nerve patterns revealed that, first, nerve fibres could grow almost anywhere within the wing bud...