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Publication : The immune protein CD3zeta is required for normal development of neural circuits in the retina.

First Author  Xu HP Year  2010
Journal  Neuron Volume  65
Issue  4 Pages  503-15
PubMed ID  20188655 Mgi Jnum  J:167764
Mgi Id  MGI:4879087 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2010.01.035
Citation  Xu HP, et al. (2010) The immune protein CD3zeta is required for normal development of neural circuits in the retina. Neuron 65(4):503-15
abstractText  Emerging evidence suggests that immune proteins regulate activity-dependent synapse formation in the central nervous system (CNS). Mice with mutations in class I major histocompatibility complex (MHCI) genes have incomplete eye-specific segregation of retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axon projections to the CNS. This effect has been attributed to causes that are nonretinal in origin. We show that a key component of MHCI receptor, CD3zeta, is expressed in RGCs. CD3zeta-deficient mice have reduced RGC dendritic motility, an increase in RGC dendritic density, and a selective defect of glutamate-receptor-mediated synaptic activity in the retina. Disrupted RGC synaptic activity and dendritic motility is associated with a failure of eye-specific segregation of RGC axon projections to the CNS. These results provide direct evidence of an unrecognized requirement for immune proteins in the developmental regulation of RGC synaptic wiring and indicate a possible retinal origin for the disruption of eye-specific segregation found in immune-deficient mice.
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