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Fig. 1. Early development of the neuromuscular system in the trunk of the embryo. (A) At 16 hpf. In each spinal cord segment three or sometimes four motor neurons (RoP, MiP, CaP/VaP, as shown in green) are positioned ventrally either side of the midline (Eisen, et al., 1986 ). In the somite there are two populations of muscle cells, adaxial cells (shown in red) and lateral presomitic cells that differentiate into slow fibres and fast fibres respectively (Devoto et al., 1996 ). At around 18 hpf the motor neurons begin axon extension. Axons leave the spinal cord at a common point and grow along the medial surface of the somite (Eisen et al., 1986 ). Cuboidal adaxial cells, arranged in a 4x5 array adjacent to the notochord, begin to elongate and migrate within the somite (Devoto et al., 1996 ). (B) At 19 hpf. The leading motorneuron axon makes contact and pauses at a specialized set of muscle fibres, termed muscle pioneers. The muscle pioneers, a subset of adaxial cells that remain adjacent to the notocord, become flattened cells separating the dorsal and ventral somite. Adaxial/slow muscle fibres have formed a 1x20 array of elongated muscle fibres. (C) At 22 hpf, motor neuron axon pathways now diverge to innervate specific areas of the somite. Adaxial cells migrate radially towards the lateral surface of the somite (Devoto et al., 1996 ).
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