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ETS transcription factor ER81 is required for the pacinian corpuscle development

✍ Scribed by J. Šedý; S. Tseng; J. M. Walro; M. Grim; J. Kucera


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
435 KB
Volume
235
Category
Article
ISSN
1058-8388

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

ER81, a member of the ETS family of transcription factors, is involved in processes of specification of neuronal identity, control of sensory‐motor connectivity, and differentiation of muscle spindles. Spindles either degenerate or are abnormal in mutant mice lacking ER81. We examined whether ER81 is required for the development of another class of mechanoreceptors, the Pacinian corpuscle. ER81 was expressed by the inner core cells of the corpuscles, as reflected by expression of the lacZ reporter gene in Er81^+/lacZ^ mutants, thereby suggesting a role for ER81 in the corpuscle development. No Pacinian corpuscles or their afferent nerve fibers were present in the crus of Er81 null mice at birth. Legs of mutant embryos examined at E16.5 were also devoid of the corpuscles, but not of their afferents. Thus, Pacinian corpuscles do not form, and their afferents do not survive, in the absence of ER81. A deficiency of dorsal root ganglia neurons expressing calretinin, a marker for neurons subserving Pacinian corpuscles, correlated with the absence of corpuscles and their afferents in Er81 null mice. These observations indicate a requirement for ER81 in the assembly of Pacinian corpuscles and the survival of the sensory neurons that innervate them. Developmental Dynamics 235:1081–1089, 2006. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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