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Publication : Survival of patchwork melanoblasts is dependent upon their number in the hair follicle at the end of embryogenesis.

First Author  Aubin-Houzelstein G Year  1998
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  198
Issue  2 Pages  266-76
PubMed ID  9659932 Mgi Jnum  J:48520
Mgi Id  MGI:1270090 Doi  10.1016/S0012-1606(98)80004-3
Citation  Aubin-Houzelstein G, et al. (1998) Survival of patchwork melanoblasts is dependent upon their number in the hair follicle at the end of embryogenesis. Dev Biol 198(2):266-76
abstractText  The recessive patchwork (pwk) mutation in mice is associated with a unique hair follicle phenotype. Mice homozygous for patchwork exhibit a variegated coat containing a mixture of white and fully pigmented hairs, but no partially pigmented hairs. We have investigated the etiology of this mutation. We report here that the white hairs result from the lack of melanocytes in the follicle. As indicated by the coat color pattern of patchwork tt albino chimeras, the target cell for the patchwork mutation is the melanocyte and/or its precursor. Examination of these chimeras also suggested that patchwork does not act in a cell-autonomous manner. The colonization of the skin by melanoblasts in patchwork embryos was studied using a lacZ transgene. Melanoblasts die by apoptosis in hair follicles from homozygous pwk/pwk fetuses starting at embryonic day 18.5, indicating that patchwork acts from this stage. The combination of pwk and Kit(W-ei), a mutation responsible for a reduced number of melanoblasts in the hair follicle, suggested that pwk gene product is necessary for low numbers of melanoblasts to survive and differentiate in the hair follicle from embryonic day 18.5 onward. We conclude that the pigmented hairs on the coat of pwk/pwk mice may be attributed to a community effect among melanoblasts in the hair follicle at the end of embryogenesis. (C) 1998 Academic Press.
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