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Publication : Asynchronous synapse elimination in neonatal motor units: studies using GFP transgenic mice.

First Author  Keller-Peck CR Year  2001
Journal  Neuron Volume  31
Issue  3 Pages  381-94
PubMed ID  11516396 Mgi Jnum  J:71121
Mgi Id  MGI:2149202 Doi  10.1016/s0896-6273(01)00383-x
Citation  Keller-Peck CR, et al. (2001) Asynchronous synapse elimination in neonatal motor units: studies using GFP transgenic mice. Neuron 31(3):381-94
abstractText  In developing muscle, synapse elimination reduces the number of motor axons that innervate each postsynaptic cell. This loss of connections is thought to be a consequence of axon branch trimming. However, branch retraction has not been observed directly, and many questions remain, such as: do all motor axons retract branches, are eliminated branches withdrawn synchronously, and are withdrawing branches localized to particular regions? To address these questions, we used transgenic mice that express fluorescent proteins in small subsets of motor axons, providing a unique opportunity to reconstruct complete axonal arbors and identify all the postsynaptic targets. We found that, during early postnatal development, each motor axon loses terminal branches, but retracting branches withdraw asynchronously and without obvious spatial bias, suggesting that local interactions at each neuromuscular junction regulate synapse elimination.
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