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Publication : Expression patterns of developmental control genes in normal and Engrailed-1 mutant mouse spinal cord reveal early diversity in developing interneurons.

First Author  Matise MP Year  1997
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  17
Issue  20 Pages  7805-16
PubMed ID  9315901 Mgi Jnum  J:43464
Mgi Id  MGI:1097765 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.17-20-07805.1997
Citation  Matise MP, et al. (1997) Expression patterns of developmental control genes in normal and Engrailed-1 mutant mouse spinal cord reveal early diversity in developing interneurons. J Neurosci 17(20):7805-16
abstractText  The vertebrate spinal cord has long served as a useful system for studying the pattern of cell differentiation along the dorsoventral (d/v) axis. In this paper, we have defined the expression of several classes of genes expressed in restricted d/v domains in the intermediate region (IR) of the mouse spinal cord, in which most interneurons are generated. From this analysis, we have found that spinal cord interneurons and their precursors express unique combinations of transcription factors and Notch ligands at the onset of their differentiation. The domains of expression of a number of different classes of genes share similar boundaries, indicating that there could be a basic subdivision of the ventral IR into four distinct regions. This differential gene expression suggests that spinal cord interneurons acquire unique identities early in their development and that Notch signaling mechanisms may participate in the determination of cell fate along the d/v axis. Gene expression studies in Engrailed-1 (En-1) mutants showed that En-1-expressing and other closely positioned classes of neurons do not require the homeodomain protein En-1 for their early pattern of differentiation. Rather, it is suggested that En-1 may function to distinguish a subset of interneurons during the later maturation of the spinal cord.
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