Abstract :
The development of sensory innervation in long bones was investigated in rat tibia in fetuses on gestational days
(GD) 16-21 and in neonates and juvenile individuals on postnatal days (PD) 1-28. A double immunostaining method
was applied to study the co-localization of the neuronal growth marker growth-associated protein 43 (GAP-43) and
the pan-neuronal marker protein gene product 9.5 (PGP 9.5) as well as that of two sensory fibre-associated
neuropeptides, calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and substance P (SP). The earliest, not yet chemically coded,
nerve fibres were observed on GD17 in the perichondrium of the proximal epiphysis. Further development of the
innervation was characterized by the successive appearance of nerve fibres in the perichondrium/periosteum of
the shaft (GD19), the bone marrow cavity and intercondylar eminence (GD21), the metaphyses (PD1), the cartilage
canals penetrating into the epiphyses (PD7), and finally in the secondary ossification centres (PD10) and epiphyseal
bone marrow (PD14). Maturation of the fibres, manifested by their immunoreactivity for CGRP and SP, was visible
on GD21 in the epiphyseal perichondrium, the periosteum of the shaft and the bone marrow, on PD1 in the
intercondylar eminence and the metaphyses, on PD7 in the cartilage canals, on PD10 in the secondary ossification
centres and on PD14 in the epiphyseal bone marrow. The temporal and topographic pattern of nerve fibre appearance
corresponds with the development of regions characterized by active mineralization and bone remodelling,
suggesting a possible involvement of the sensory innervation in these processes
Keywords :
bone , fetus , immunohistochemistry , Ossification