Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9416005 | Brain Research | 2005 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
The distribution of motor and proprioceptive neurons was investigated in the trigeminal nervous system of wild-type and Brn-3a knockout mice at embryonic day 18.5 and postnatal day 0. We found that the trigeminal motor nucleus (Mo5) contained abundant motoneurons in wild-type (mean number ± SD per section = 128 ± 22, range = 93-167) and knockout (mean number ± SD per section = 121 ± 23, range = 75-158) mice and that the cell size of Mo5 neurons was similar between these mice (wild-type, mean ± SD = 165 ± 59 μm2, range = 65-326 μm2; knockout, mean ± SD = 167 ± 59 μm2, range = 71-327 μm2). Mo5 neurons were immunoreactive for calcitonin gene-related peptide and such immunoreactive neurons were abundant in both wild-type and mutant mice. In the mesencephalic tract nucleus (Mes5) of wild-type mice, many proprioceptors (mean number ± SD per section = 56 ± 19, range = 27-85) that contained parvalbumin immunoreactivity were also observed. In knockout mice, however, Mes5 neurons could not be detected. The area of brainstems which normally contained the Mes5 was devoid of parvalbumin-immunoreactive proprioceptors. The present study suggests that Brn-3a is required for the development of proprioceptors but not motoneurons in the trigeminal nervous system.
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Authors
H. Ichikawa, F. Qiu, M. Xiang, T. Sugimoto,