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Publication : Noradrenaline is essential for mouse fetal development.

First Author  Thomas SA Year  1995
Journal  Nature Volume  374
Issue  6523 Pages  643-6
PubMed ID  7715704 Mgi Jnum  J:24414
Mgi Id  MGI:72180 Doi  10.1038/374643a0
Citation  Thomas SA, et al. (1995) Noradrenaline is essential for mouse fetal development. Nature 374(6523):643-6
abstractText  Catecholamines such as noradrenaline and adrenaline have been implicated in numerous physiological processes but, although catecholamine synthesis begins at mid-gestation, previous studies have provided little evidence for any role in early development. Furthermore, there are several case reports of humans with noradrenaline deficiency. To investigate this, we use gene targeting to produce mice lacking dopamine beta-hydroxylase and therefore unable to synthesize noradrenaline or adrenaline. We report here that in heterozygous mothers, most homozygous embryos died in utero, and only about 5% reached adulthood. Survival probably depends on catecholamine transfer across the placenta because, in homozygous mothers, all embryos die in utero. Mortality was due to lack of noradrenaline in utero because it could be prevented by treatment with dihydroxyphenylserine, a precursor that can be converted to noradrenaline in the absence of dopamine beta-hydroxylase. Mutant embryos had a histological phenotype similar to that of embryos deficient in tyrosine hydroxylase, suggesting that death might be due to cardiovascular failure.
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