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Publication : Lingual deficits in BDNF and NT3 mutant mice leading to gustatory and somatosensory disturbances, respectively.

First Author  Nosrat CA Year  1997
Journal  Development Volume  124
Issue  7 Pages  1333-42
PubMed ID  9118804 Mgi Jnum  J:40033
Mgi Id  MGI:87372 Doi  10.1242/dev.124.7.1333
Citation  Nosrat CA, et al. (1997) Lingual deficits in BDNF and NT3 mutant mice leading to gustatory and somatosensory disturbances, respectively. Development 124(7):1333-42
abstractText  A combination of anatomical, histological and physiological data from wild-type and null-mutated mice have established crucial roles for BDNF and NT3 in gustatory and somatosensory innervation of the tongue, and indeed for proper development of the papillary surface of the tongue. BDNF is expressed in taste buds, NT3 in many surrounding epithelial structures. Absence of BDNF in mice leads to severely malformed taste bud-bearing papillae and severe reduction of taste buds, a loss of proper innervation of remaining taste buds and a loss of taste discrimination although not of the suckling reflex per se. In contrast, absence of NT3 leads to a massive loss of somatosensory innervation of lingual structures. These findings demonstrate distinct roles for BDNF and NT3 in the establishment of the complex innervation apparatus of the tongue with non-overlapping roles for the lingual gustatory and somatosensory systems. The distinction between different sensory modalities, being dependent on either BDNF or NT3 may also have clinical implications.
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