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Publication : Cerebellar disorganization characteristic of reeler in scrambler mutant mice despite presence of reelin.

First Author  Goldowitz D Year  1997
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  17
Issue  22 Pages  8767-77
PubMed ID  9348346 Mgi Jnum  J:44084
Mgi Id  MGI:1099335 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.17-22-08767.1997
Citation  Goldowitz D, et al. (1997) Cerebellar disorganization characteristic of reeler in scrambler mutant mice despite presence of reelin. J Neurosci 17(22):8767-77
abstractText  Analysis of the molecular basis of neuronal migration in the mammalian CNS relies critically on the discovery and identification of genetic mutations that affect this process. Here, we report the detailed cerebellar phenotype caused by a new autosomal recessive neurological mouse mutation, scrambler (gene symbol scm). The scrambler mutation results in ataxic mice that exhibit several neuroanatomic defects reminiscent of reeler. The most obvious of these lies in the cerebellum, which is small and lacks foliation. Granule cells, although normally placed in an internal granule cell layer, are greatly reduced in number (approximately 20% of normal). Purkinje cells are also reduced in number, and the majority are located ectopically in deep cerebellar masses. There is a small population of Purkinje cells ( approximately 5% of the total) that occupy a Purkinje cell layer between the molecular and granule cell layers. Despite this apparent disorganization of Purkinje cells, zebrin-positive and zebrin-negative parasagittal zones can be delineated. The ectopic masses of Purkinje cells are bordered by the extracellular matrix protein tenascin and by processes containing glial fibrillary acidic protein. Antibodies specific for these proteins also identify a novel midline raphe structure in both scrambler and reeler cerebellum that is not present in wild-type mice. Thus, in many respects, the scrambler cerebellum is identical to that of reeler. However, the scrambler locus has been mapped to a site distinct from that of reelin (Reln), the gene responsible for the reeler defect. Here we find that there are normal levels of Reln mRNA in scrambler brain and that reelin protein is secreted normally by scrambler cerebellar cells. These findings imply that the scrambler gene product may function in a molecular pathway critical for neuronal migration that is tightly linked to, but downstream of, reelin.
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