Wheat germ agglutinin–horseradish peroxidase conjugate
(WGA–HRP) was injected into the dorsal root ganglia
(L5–S1) of the cat and used as an anterograde tracer substance
for intra-axonal labelling of peripheral nerve endings in joint
capsule and cranial (anterior) cruciate ligament (CCL). We believed
that the high specificity of WGA–HRP for neural tissue along
with the high visibility of its reaction product could help resolve
controversies concerning the sensory innervation of the cruciate
ligaments. Substantial amounts of WGA–HRP were transported in
tibial nerve axons to the level of the knee. However, using standard
HRP histochemistry we found that the capsular tissue and ligament
synovia disintegrated during the incubation reaction. This problem was
avoided by air drying the tissue slices on glass slides prior to
reaction. Abundant labelling occurred in the posterior capsule with
dense filling of axons and terminal endings. Sensory endings displayed
features consistent with Ruffini endings and pacinian corpuscles.
Sensory endings were located throughout the CCL in its sagittal plane,
in the subsynovial layers and between collagen fascicles. In each CCL
we observed 5–17 ovoid and elongated endings with dense terminal
arborisations. These endings were between 100 and 150 μm long, were
encapsulated, and gave rise to 1 or 2 axons. Large (up to 1.5
mm in maximum extent) elongated regions of dense, inhomogeneous
labelling were found in the body of several CCLs. These resembled
Golgi tendon-like endings, with the exception of their large size. We
conclude that anterograde transport of HRP to the knee is a useful
technique for labelling mechanoreceptors and axons in knee tissue.
However, recently developed immunohistochemical analysis of peripheral
tissue using protein gene product 9.5 appears to be the method
of choice and should be employed for further study of human and animal
cruciate ligament innervation.