J Neurosci 5: 1940-6 (1985)
Loss of supernumerary axons during neuronal morphogenesis.
R. D. Heathcote & P. B. Sargent
The morphogenesis of individual neurons was investigated in the cardiac
ganglion of the frog. Intracellular injection of horseradish peroxidase shows
that mature neurons lack dendrites and have a single axon. Early in
development, more than half of the neurons are multipolar and have as many as
four processes emanating from their cell body. The most likely mechanism for
the developmental transformation of larval neurons is that the supernumerary
processes are pruned from the cell body. Supernumerary processes in larval
neurons have features characteristic of axons. The processes of larval neurons
can be highly branched and extend throughout the target with distinctive
varicosities along the length of each process. Electron microscopy shows that
all processes of individually injected cells contain clusters of vesicles
apposed to active zones. Thus, the larval cardiac ganglion neuron is capable of
extending more than one axon from its cell body.