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Publication : Functional redundancy and gustatory development in bdnf null mutant mice.

First Author  Cooper D Year  1998
Journal  Brain Res Dev Brain Res Volume  105
Issue  1 Pages  79-84
PubMed ID  9497082 Mgi Jnum  J:45553
Mgi Id  MGI:1195603 Citation  Cooper D, et al. (1998) Functional redundancy and gustatory development in bdnf null mutant mice. Brain Res Dev Brain Res 105(1):79-84
abstractText  In the mouse nasopalate papilla and in the trenches of the foliate and vallate papillae, taste buds accumulated primarily during the first 2 weeks after birth. Null mutation for brain-derived neuro-trophic factor caused extensive death of embryonic taste neurons, with the secondary outcome that most taste buds failed to form. However not all taste neurons died; functional redundancy rescued a variable number. The primary research objective was to identify the likely site of the taste neuron rescue factor that substituted for BDNF. In this quest taste bud abundance served as a useful gauge of taste neuron abundance. The proportion of taste buds that developed was variable and uncorrelated among the nasopalate, vallate, and foliate gustatory papillae within each bdnf null mutant mouse. Thus, in spite of shared IXth nerve innervation, the vallate and foliate papillae independently varied in residual gustatory innervation. This variation rules against the rescue of gustatory neurons by system-wide factors or by factors acting on the IXth ganglion or nerve trunk. Therefore it is likely that surviving BDNF-deprived taste neurons were stochastically rescued by a redundant neurotrophic factor at the level of the local gustatory epithelium. These findings broaden the classic expectation that target tissue supplies only a single neurotrophic factor that can sustain sensory (taste) neurons.
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