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Raija L.P. Lindberg, Rudolf Martini, Matthias Baumgartner, Beat Erne, Jacques Borg, Jürgen Zielasek, Kenneth Ricker, Andreas Steck, Klaus V. Toyka, Urs A. Meyer
Published in Volume 103, Issue 8
J Clin Invest. 1999; 103(8):1127–1134 doi:10.1172/JCI5986
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Figure 4

Electron microscopy of pathological features indicative of axon degeneration of quadriceps and saphenous nerves in six-month-old PBGD–/– mice. (a and b) The axon of this fiber is characterized by a complete disorganization of its cytoskeletal elements and by electron-dense material apposed to the axolemma (arrows in a). The high-power electron micrograph (b) reveals an interrupted axon membrane (arrowheads). The periaxonal compartment is poorly defined. (c and d) These fibers are characterized by axonal loss and a contortion of the remaining myelin profiles, a feature reminiscent of Wallerian degeneration. Note denervated Schwann cell reminiscent of a band of Büngner at the upper-right corner in c (arrow). Asterisk in c is on an endoneurial fibroblast. (e) In the quadriceps nerve, the Schwann cells form abnormal processes protruding into the endoneurial space (arrows). (f) The myelinated and nonmyelinated fibers of the saphenous nerve are not distinguishable from fibers of wild-type mice. Note the individual ensheathment of each axon by a process of the nonmyelinated Schwann cell (small arrows). Scale bars: 0.5 μm