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Spinal muscular atrophy gene wobbler of the mouse: Evidence from chimeric spinal cord and testis for cell-autonomous function

✍ Scribed by Martin Augustin; Peter Heimann; Silvia Rathke; Harald Jockusch


Book ID
102650921
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
834 KB
Volume
209
Category
Article
ISSN
1058-8388

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✦ Synopsis


Human hereditary neurodegenerative diseases are genetically and mechanistically very heterogeneous and so are spinal muscular atrophies and cerebellar ataxias in the mouse, despite the common phenomenon of neuronal death. In this species, a number of mutations impair spermiogenesis in addition to neuron survival. Among these, the wobbler mutation on proximal chromosome 11 of the mouse leads to motoneuron degeneration in brain stem and spinal cord and to a defect of spermiogenesis. Chimeric mice of the type wr?/wr? & 1/1 were produced, and their allelic status at the wr locus was determined by PCR diagnosis of a closely linked marker. Two overt chimeras, one female (XX & XX) and one male (XY & XY) were identified as wr/wr & 1/1 and analyzed with respect to their pathological phenotype. Although there was patchy astrogliosis in the spinal cords of both chimeras, their motor performances were overtly normal and muscles were without signs of denervation. The male's testes revealed a mosaic pattern of normal and pathological spermatids. As no progeny was derived from wr spermatids, the spermatocytes appear as a primary target of the wr mutation in testis. Our results argue against a humoral mechanism of the wobbler disease and indicate a cell-autonomous action of the wr gene both in testis and in spinal cord.