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Development of the cerebellar defect in ataxic SELH/Bc mice.
- Source :
-
Teratology [Teratology] 1994 Jul; Vol. 50 (1), pp. 63-73. - Publication Year :
- 1994
-
Abstract
- In SELH/Bc mice, 5-10% of young adults are ataxic, due to a midline cleft in the cerebellum. An additional 10-20% of SELH/Bc embryos have exencephaly and die at birth. All SELH/Bc embryos omit a normal step in cranial neural tube closure, initiation of fusion at Closure 2. In the 80-90% that complete cranial neural tube closure, the last region of closure, on late D9, is the region of the prospective cerebellum, and its closure is late. We postulated that the cleft cerebellum in ataxic SELH/Bc mice derives from this delay in neural tube closure and predicted that we would see evidence of a cerebellar midline cleft in all earlier stages after cranial neural tube closure is normally complete. In the present study we show that the cerebellum is cleft in a 7-9% proportion of SELH/Bc D16 fetuses (2/28) and D11 embryos (15/167), and that the defect is detectable on D10. In these abnormal D16 fetuses, D11 and D10 embryos, there is a gap in midline continuity of cerebellar neuroepithelium, a finding consistent with our hypothesis that the neuroepithelium in this region fails to complete fusion in those embryos. We also show that cerebella of adult SELH/Bc ataxic mice have no obvious deficiency of lobules, or disorganization of tissue as in the Wnt-1 mutants.
- Subjects :
- Animals
Blotting, Southern
Cerebellar Ataxia genetics
Embryonic and Fetal Development
Female
Male
Mesencephalon abnormalities
Mesencephalon embryology
Mesencephalon ultrastructure
Mice
Mice, Neurologic Mutants genetics
Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
Neural Tube Defects genetics
Rhombencephalon abnormalities
Rhombencephalon embryology
Rhombencephalon ultrastructure
Cerebellar Ataxia embryology
Cerebellum abnormalities
Mice, Neurologic Mutants embryology
Neural Tube Defects embryology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0040-3709
- Volume :
- 50
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Teratology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 7974256
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1002/tera.1420500109