First Author | Henry EW | Year | 1983 |
Journal | J Neuropathol Exp Neurol | Volume | 42 |
Issue | 6 | Pages | 688-706 |
PubMed ID | 6313869 | Mgi Jnum | J:7222 |
Mgi Id | MGI:55693 | Doi | 10.1097/00005072-198311000-00008 |
Citation | Henry EW, et al. (1983) Comparison of Trembler and Trembler-J mouse phenotypes: varying severity of peripheral hypomyelination. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol 42(6):688-706 |
abstractText | Trembler (Tr) is an autosomal dominant mutation which produces hypomyelination and demyelination in the mouse peripheral nervous system. This paper compares the genetic, behavioral, and pathological aspects of trembler-J, (TrJ) to those of the original Tr mutation. We found that TrJ was tightly linked on chromosome 11 to vestigial tail, vt, as is Tr. Most TrJ/? animals were more mildly affected behaviorally and pathologically than Tr/? animals. Tr/? animals were rather uniformly affected. In contrast, with matings of mildly affected TrJ/? (putative TrJ/+) animals to each other, and not with matings of putative TrJ/+ X +/+, some offspring, putative homozygotes, TrJ/TrJ, were more severely affected behaviorally and had more extreme peripheral hypomyelination than any Tr/? animals. In spite of their differences, Tr/?, putative TrJ/+, and putative TrJ/TrJ animals shared a failure or marked delay of Schwann cells to progress from the stage of axonal ensheathment in a 1:1 relationship to myelination. We conclude that Tr and TrJ are probably allelic, and that despite their phenotypic differences, their actions are fundamentally similar. While Tr is a dominant, we believe that TrJ behaves as a semidominant, which in homozygotes, TrJ/TrJ, produces the most severe heritable peripheral myelin deficiency hitherto described. |