Grafts of living or freeze-killed freshly dissected colonic smooth
muscle from young inbred Fischer rats were
implanted into the corpus striatum of adult Fischer rats. Sections of brain
were examined electron
microscopically 3 and 6 wk after implantation. At both times, living
grafts were vascularised and contained
healthy differentiated smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts, interstitial
cells of Cajal and some macrophages.
Large bundles of small nonmyelinated axons, identified as CNS axonal
sprouts, could be observed in the
brain at and near the interface between the living smooth muscle and the
CNS tissue. Bundles of
regenerating CNS axons, often associated with astrocyte processes,
had grown into the grafts. Some axons
within the grafts had matured, enlarged and become myelinated by
oligodendrocyte processes or Schwann
cells. In some cases, smooth muscle cells were observed in close and
intricate association with axons. In
contrast to the living grafts, grafts of freeze-killed smooth muscle,
examined 3 and 6 wk after implantation,
contained macrophages, fibroblasts, collagen and large amounts of
cellular debris, but no living muscle cells,
astrocytes or Schwann cells. The striatal neuropil around freeze-killed
grafts did not contain large bundles of
CNS axonal sprouts and bundles of axons were not observed within the
freeze-killed graft. This study
demonstrates that cells from the smooth muscle layers of the colon, in
the
absence of myenteric ganglia, can
stimulate a vigorous regenerative response from CNS axons when implanted
into the corpus striatum of adult rats.