Purkinje cell compartmentalization in the cerebellum of the spontaneous mutant mouse dreher

被引:0
|
作者
Roy V. Sillitoe
Nicholas A. George-Jones
Kathleen J. Millen
Richard Hawkes
机构
[1] Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute of Texas Children’s Hospital,Department of Pathology and Immunology, Baylor College of Medicine
[2] Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute of Texas Children’s Hospital,Department of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine
[3] Seattle Children’s Hospital Research Institute Center for Integrative Brain Research,Department of Pediatrics
[4] The University of Washington,Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, Hotchkiss Brain Institute
[5] The University of Calgary,undefined
来源
Brain Structure and Function | 2014年 / 219卷
关键词
Whole-mount immunohistochemistry; HSP25; Zebrin II; Cerebellar development;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The cerebellar morphological phenotype of the spontaneous neurological mutant mouse dreher (Lmx1adr-J) results from cell fate changes in dorsal midline patterning involving the roof plate and rhombic lip. Positional cloning revealed that the gene Lmx1a, which encodes a LIM homeodomain protein, is mutated in dreher, and is expressed in the developing roof plate and rhombic lip. Loss of Lmx1a causes reduction of the roof plate, an important embryonic signaling center, and abnormal cell fate specification within the embryonic cerebellar rhombic lip. In adult animals, these defects result in variable, medial fusion of the cerebellar vermis and posterior cerebellar vermis hypoplasia. It is unknown whether deleting Lmx1a results in displacement or loss of specific lobules in the vermis. To distinguish between an ectopic and absent vermis, the expression patterns of two Purkinje cell-specific compartmentation antigens, zebrin II/aldolase C and the small heat shock protein HSP25 were analyzed in dreher cerebella. The data reveal that despite the reduction in volume and abnormal foliation of the cerebellum, the transverse zones and parasagittal stripe arrays characteristic of the normal vermis are present in dreher, but may be highly distorted. In dreher mutants with a severe phenotype, zebrin II stripes are fragmented and distributed non-symmetrically about the cerebellar midline. We conclude that although Purkinje cell agenesis or selective Purkinje cell death may contribute to the dreher phenotype, our data suggest that aberrant anlage patterning and granule cell development lead to Purkinje cell ectopia, which ultimately causes abnormal cerebellar architecture in dreher.
引用
收藏
页码:35 / 47
页数:12
相关论文
empty
未找到相关数据