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Publication : Cerebellar Purkinje cell loss during life span of the heterozygous staggerer mouse (Rora(+)/Rora(sg)) is gender-related.

First Author  Doulazmi M Year  1999
Journal  J Comp Neurol Volume  411
Issue  2 Pages  267-73
PubMed ID  10404252 Mgi Jnum  J:56379
Mgi Id  MGI:1340893 Citation  Doulazmi M, et al. (1999) Cerebellar Purkinje cell loss during life span of the heterozygous staggerer mouse (Rora(+)/Rora(sg)) is gender-related. J Comp Neurol 411(2):267-73
abstractText  The staggerer mutation causes dysgenesis of the cerebellar cortex in the homozygous mutant (Rora(sg)/Rora(sg)). The mutation acts intrinsically within the Purkinje cells (PCs), leading to cytological abnormalities and a severe deficit in the number of these cells. In contrast, in the heterozygous staggerer (Rora(+)/Rora(sg)), the cytoarchitecture of the cerebellar cortex appears to be normal, but quantitative studies have revealed a significant loss of cerebellar neurons with advancing age. In the heterozygous reeler (+/rl), another mutant presenting a PC loss with age, we have found that only males were affected (Hadj-Sahraoui et al., 1996). In the present study, we have investigated whether a similar gender effect exists in the heterozygous staggerer during life span. PCs were counted on cerebellar sagittal sections in male and female Rora+/Rorasg and in their Rora(+)/Rora(+) littermates at 1, 3, 9, 13, 18, and 24 months of age. In the Rora(+)/Rora(+), the number of PCs remained stable until 18 months, but there was a 25% significant loss in 24- month-old mice of both genders. During life span, Rora(+)/Rora(+) males had slightly more PC than females. In the Rora(+)/Rora(sg) of both genders, the deficit in PC number was similar at 13 months but it appeared earlier in males, beginning between I. And 3 months, and was aggravated regularly up to 13 months. By contrast, the decline was delayed and more abrupt in Rora(+)/Rora(sg) females, from a value still normal at 9 months to its maximal extent at 13 months. In view of these results, the heterozygous (Rora(+)/Rora(sg)) mouse offers an interesting model to test the interaction between sex, age, and genetic background on the development and maintenance of cerebellar neuronal populations. (C) 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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