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Publication : A lifespan analysis of intraneocortical connections and gene expression in the mouse II.

First Author  Dye CA Year  2011
Journal  Cereb Cortex Volume  21
Issue  6 Pages  1331-50
PubMed ID  21060113 Mgi Jnum  J:184356
Mgi Id  MGI:5320752 Doi  10.1093/cercor/bhq213
Citation  Dye CA, et al. (2011) A lifespan analysis of intraneocortical connections and gene expression in the mouse II. Cereb Cortex 21(6):1331-50
abstractText  The mammalian neocortex contains an intricate processing network of multiple sensory and motor areas that allows the animal to engage in complex behaviors. These anatomically and functionally unique areas and their distinct connections arise during early development, through a process termed arealization. Both intrinsic, activity-independent and extrinsic, activity-dependent mechanisms drive arealization, much of which occurs during the areal patterning period (APP) from late embryogenesis to early postnatal life. How areal boundaries and their connections develop and change from infancy to adulthood is not known. Additionally, the adult patterns of sensory and motor ipsilateral intraneocortical connections (INCs) have not been thoroughly characterized in the mouse. In this report and its companion (I), we present the first lifespan analysis of ipsilateral INCs among multiple sensory and motor regions in mouse. We describe the neocortical expression patterns of several developmentally regulated genes that are of central importance to studies investigating the molecular regulation of arealization, from postnatal day (P) 6 to P50. In this study, we correlate the boundaries of gene expression patterns with developing areal boundaries across a lifespan, in order to better understand the nature of gene-areal relationships from early postnatal life to adulthood.
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