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Publication : Topographic mapping from the retina to the midbrain is controlled by relative but not absolute levels of EphA receptor signaling.

First Author  Brown A Year  2000
Journal  Cell Volume  102
Issue  1 Pages  77-88
PubMed ID  10929715 Mgi Jnum  J:63516
Mgi Id  MGI:1861089 Doi  10.1016/s0092-8674(00)00012-x
Citation  Brown A, et al. (2000) Topographic mapping from the retina to the midbrain is controlled by relative but not absolute levels of EphA receptor signaling. Cell 102(1):77-88
abstractText  Topographic maps are a fundamental feature of sensory representations in nervous systems. The formation of one such map, defined by the connection of ganglion cells in the retina to their targets in the superior colliculus of the midbrain, is thought to depend upon an interaction between complementary gradients of retinal EphA receptors and collicular ephrin-A ligands. We have tested this hypothesis by using gene targeting to elevate EphA receptor expression in a subset of mouse ganglion cells, thereby producing two intermingled ganglion cell populations that express distinct EphA receptor gradients. We find that these two populations form separate maps in the colliculus, which can be predicted as a function of the net EphA receptor level that a given ganglion cell expresses relative to its neighbors.
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