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Publication : Abnormal astrocyte differentiation and defective cellular interactions in wobbler mouse spinal cord.

First Author  Hantaz-Ambroise D Year  1994
Journal  J Neurocytol Volume  23
Issue  3 Pages  179-92
PubMed ID  8006678 Mgi Jnum  J:18368
Mgi Id  MGI:66364 Doi  10.1007/BF01181559
Citation  Hantaz-Ambroise D, et al. (1994) Abnormal astrocyte differentiation and defective cellular interactions in wobbler mouse spinal cord. J Neurocytol 23(3):179-92
abstractText  The wobbler mutation is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait and displays a muscular atrophy associated with motoneuron degeneration in early postnatal development. It has been shown that the level of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) is greatly increased in the spinal cord of wobbler mice. We performed immunocytochemical analyses combined with confocal microscopy to study the developmental distribution of GFAP-positive astrocytes in the spinal cord of wobbler mice during the course of the disease, and in primary cultures of adult wobbler spinal cord astrocytes. Many changes in the number and distribution of astrocytes were observed in the wobbler mice from 1-10 months post-partum. Strongly GFAP-positive astrocytes are present in small number in the anterior horn by 1 month. They increase in number and are observed in the entire spinal cord grey and white matters by 2-10 months. These reactive astrocytes have thick, short, extensively branched processes which contrast with the long, unbranched processes observed in control mice. The wobbler astrocyte processes are oriented perpendicular to the surface of the spinal cord, which contrasts with the normal parallel, concentric orientation. No expansion of astrocyte processes exit from the white matter towards the grey matter. Moreover, the surface of the wobbler spinal cord beneath the meninges displays a dramatic decrease of interdigitating processes, end feet and flattened cell bodies of astrocytes that form a disorganized layer. In vitro, mutant astrocytes have morphological characteristics similar to those in vivo and, in particular, develop short, thick, branched processes. These mutant astrocytes in cultures do not contact one another, whereas normal mature cultures show an increased incidence of cell-cell contacts between long processes. The increase of astrocyte reactivity associated with these modifications in astrocytic process arrangement may reflect an important primary event in the course of the wobbler disease rather than a non-specific response to motoneuronal death.
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