Many studies demonstrate that differentiation of certain sensory
receptors during development is induced by
their nerve supply. Thus the navigational accuracy of pioneering fibres
to
their targets is crucial to this
process. The special gustatory elements of the facial and glossopharyngeal
nerves are used extensively as
model systems in this field. We examined the chorda tympani, the gustatory
component of the facial nerve,
to determine the precise time course of its development in mice. The
transganglionic fluorescent tracer DiI
was injected into the anterior aspect of the mandibular arch of fixed
embryos aged between 30 and 50
somites (E10–E12). It was allowed to diffuse retrogradely via the
geniculate ganglion to the brainstem for
4 wk, before the distribution of DiI was determined using confocal laser
scanning microscopy. Geniculate
ganglion cells were first labelled at the 34 somite stage (E10). Pioneering
chorda tympani fibres that arise
from these cells passed peripherally and followed an oblique course as
they
grew towards the mandibular
arch. At the 36 somite stage (E10.5), the peripheral component followed
an
intricate postspiracular course
and passed anteriorly to arch over the primitive tympanic cavity, en route
to the lingual epithelium. From
the 36 to 50 somite stages (E10.5–E12), it consistently traced in
the fashion of a
‘U’ bend. The central
fascicle also traced at the 36 somite stage (E10.5) and just made contact
with the brainstem. At the 40
somite stage (E11), the central fibres clearly chose a route of descent
into the spinal trigeminal tract and
branched into the solitary tract. Pioneering chorda tympani fibres contact
the lingual epithelium when the
target is primordial. The lingual epithelium may be a source of a
neurotropic factor that attracts peripheral
chorda tympani fibres to the sites of putative papillae. However, the
chorda tympani is probably not a vital
influence on the subsequent differentiation of gustatory papillae, since
the
papillae are elaborated 5 d later at
E15 in murine embryos. The early morphology of the nerve is true to the
amniote vertebrate phenotype.