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Publication : The sensory innervation of the mouse spinal cord may be patterned by differential expression of and differential responsiveness to semaphorins.

First Author  Püschel AW Year  1996
Journal  Mol Cell Neurosci Volume  7
Issue  5 Pages  419-31
PubMed ID  8812066 Mgi Jnum  J:37600
Mgi Id  MGI:84990 Doi  10.1006/mcne.1996.0030
Citation  Puschel AW, et al. (1996) The sensory innervation of the mouse spinal cord may be patterned by differential expression of and differential responsiveness to semaphorins. Mol Cell Neurosci 7(5):419-31
abstractText  To better understand the regulatory processes underlying axonal pathfinding we analyzed the embryonic expression of seven murine semaphorin genes by in situ hybridization In the spinal cord, transcripts of all seven semaphorin genes were detected from Embryonic Day 11.5 (E11.5) onward and restricted to distinct regions at E15.5. Interestingly, semE, F, and G mRNAs were in addition differentially expressed in the ventricular zone of the telencephalon. In order to correlate these expression patterns to the behavior of different types of sensory afferents, we tested their response to recombinant semaphorin proteins. Specific subpopulations of dorsal root ganglion sensory neurons displayed a developmentally regulated differential response to Sem D. Whereas extension of both NGF- and NT-3-dependent neurites was inhibited by Sem D at E12.5, only neurites formed in the presence of NGF responded at E14.5. This suggests that Sem D may be involved in preventing an early penetration of the spinal cord by sensory afferents and subsequently shaping their lamina-specific termination.
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