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Publication : Viable hypomorphic signaling mutant of the Met receptor reveals a role for hepatocyte growth factor in postnatal cerebellar development.

First Author  Ieraci A Year  2002
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  99
Issue  23 Pages  15200-5
PubMed ID  12397180 Mgi Jnum  J:81793
Mgi Id  MGI:2450013 Doi  10.1073/pnas.222362099
Citation  Ieraci A, et al. (2002) Viable hypomorphic signaling mutant of the Met receptor reveals a role for hepatocyte growth factor in postnatal cerebellar development. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99(23):15200-5
abstractText  Cerebellar development occurs mainly postnatally and implies cell proliferation and migration. Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and Met are involved in mediating these responses in other tissues and are coexpressed in the cerebellum. Here we show that Met is localized in granule cell precursors and that cultures of these cells respond to HGF with proliferation. To study the role of HGF and Met in the cerebellum in vivo, we produced a viable hypomorphic Met mutant by knocking in the met locus a point mutation to abrogate the receptor Grb2-binding site. A similar mutant was previously described as perinatal lethal. In this 'first-generation' knock-in the recombinant locus retained the Neo cassette (Met(grb2/grb2neo+)). In the knock-in presented here Neo was Loxed and excised by Cre recombinase, which led to higher tissue levels of Met(grb2) protein, sufficient to rescue viability. In Met(grb2/grb2neo-) mice the size of the cerebellum was reduced and foliation defects were evident, especially in the central and posterior half of the vermis. Proliferation of granule precursors in vivo was 25% lower than in controls. In cultures of mutant granule cells HGF-induced microtubule-associated protein kinase activation was reduced and transient. Behavioral tests indicated a balance impairment in Met(grb2/grb2neo-) mice. Altogether these data indicate that normal cerebellar development and, possibly, function, require HGF and Met, and that proliferation of granule cells in the cerebellum critically depends on full HGF/Met signaling.
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