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1.
The distribution of two glial antigens (C1 and M1) has been studied by indi-rect immunofluorescence during postnatal development of the cerebella of normal and neurologically mutant mice (weaver, staggerer, reeler, Purkinje cell degeneration, and wobbler). During the first postnatal week of normal development, C1 antigen is expressed in ependyma, Bergmann glial fibers (BG), and astrocytes of the internal granular layer and white matter. After day 10, C1 antigen is restricted to BG and ependymal cells. During the sec-ond and third week, BG undergo a transient loss of C1 antigen that starts in medioventral areas and spreads in a gradient dorsally and laterally. In reeler, weaver, and staggerer, C1 antigen expression is normal during the first postnatal week, and subsides in BG in a similar spatial gra- dient as described for the normal littermates. However, the loss of C1 anti-gen in BG occurs earlier (first in reeler, then in weaver, and last in staggerer) and is not reversible as it is in normal mice. In Purkinje cell de-generation, C1 antigen expression is diminished in BG after the onset of be-havioral abnormalities. Wobbler is normal with respect to C1 antigen ex-pression at adult ages. M1 antigen is detectable in white matter astrocytes from postnatal day 7 on, and persists in these cells into adulthood. Astrocytes of the internal granular layer and BG express M1 antigen only transiently in normal mice during the second and third weeks. The appearance of M1 antigen in BG occurs in a spatiotemporal gradient, matching the one in which C1 antigen disappears. M1 antigen expression is abnormally maintained in BG of reeler, staggerer, and weaver. In Purkinje cell degeneration, M1 antigen is ex-pressed abnormally at the onset of behavioral abnormalities first in.astro-cytes of the internal granular layer and, with growing age, increasingly also in BG. In wobbler, BG do not express M1 antigen. However, astrocytes of the granular layer are abnormally M1 antigen-positive.  相似文献   

2.
Macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) is known to be the most effective growth factor for macrophage and microglial proliferation. In the brain tissue system, M-CSF is mainly produced in astrocytes and microglia, but is not known to occur in neurons. In the present paper, we examined the distribution of neurons expressing M-CSF in the mouse brain by immuno-histochemistry and in situ hybridization. We observed M-CSF immunoreactivity in both the cerebellum and the olfactory bulb. These positive cells were found to be Purkinje cells in the cerebellum, and mitral cells in the olfactory bulb. M-CSF mRNA expression was also confirmed to occur in these cells. Purkinje cells of reeler and weaver mutants showed M-CSF expression as seen in wild-type mice; however, those in the staggerer mutant did not. This expression in wild-type mice first appeared at postnatal day 7 and continued stably thereafter. When Purkinje cells were deprived of their climbing fibre innervation by inferior cerebellar pedunculotomy or by transplantation of cerebellar anlagen into the anterior eye chamber, the expression of M-CSF remained unchanged. These data indicate that expression of M-CSF in Purkinje cells is controlled by an intrinsic mechanism and could, therefore, be a new marker of postnatal development in rodent cerebella. The absence of M-CSF expression in the staggerer mutant is possibly due to developmental arrest in the early postnatal period.  相似文献   

3.
By a highly sensitive enzyme immunoassay we measured the level of nerve growth factor (NGF) in the cerebellum and cerebrum of the neurologically mutant mice, weaver, reeler and Purkinje cell degeneration (PCD). A significant decrease in NGF level was observed in both cerebellum and cerebrum of weaver and reeler mutants of either sex. However, there was no such difference between normals and mutants in the case of the PCD mice. These results show that weaver and reeler mice have abnormalities of NGF synthesis and/or degradation not only in the cerebellum but also in the cerebrum.  相似文献   

4.
The content of glutamate, GABA, aspartate, glycine and alanine was determined in the cerebellum, brain stem and cerebrum of three different mutant mice which have been named ‘staggerer’, ‘weaver’ and ‘nervous’ on the basis of neurological symptoms. In the ‘staggerer’ and ‘weaver’ mutants there is an almost complete absence of granule cells in the cerebellar cortex while in the ‘nervous’ mutant there is a loss of Purkinje cells (and to a lesser extent a loss of granule cells) in the cerebellar cortex. In the cerebellum of the ‘weaver’ mutant, the content of glutamate was signficantly lower (P < 0.025) than control values (8.77 ± 0.76 vs 12.0 ± 1.3 μmol/g tissue wet wt) and the contents of GABA and glycine were significantly greater than normal levels. In the cerebellum of the ‘staggerer’ mutant, the content of glutamate was significantly lower (6.62 ± 0.70 μmol/g) and the contents of glycine and alanine significantly higher than control values. In the cerebrum and brain stem regions of the staggerer mutant, weaver mutant and the normals the contents of the five amino acids were the same. The contents of glycine and alanine in the cerebellum, GARA and glycine in the brain stem and GABA and alanine in the cerebrum of the nervous mutants were higher than control values. The data are discussed in terms of a possible role for glutamate functioning as an excitatory transmitter when released from the cerebellar granule cells.  相似文献   

5.
Several mutations in mice produce complex patterns of neuronal degeneration of the cerebellum and of its afferent pathways. In the staggerer (sg/sg) mutant, atrophy of the lymphoid organs and immunological abnormalities have been described. To search for a possible link between the neurological and the immune disorders in this mutant, we studied the production by its peripheral macrophages of interleukin-1 (IL-1), which roles in both immune and nervous systems are well established. Suspensions of peritoneal and/or spleen macrophages from mutants and their appropriate controls were stimulated in vitro by lipopolysaccharide. Northern and dot blots, performed with murine IL-1 cDNA probes, revealed a clear-cut hyperexpression of IL-1 mRNA in staggerer macrophages. An IL-1 bioassay using the IL-1-responsive D10.G4 cell line also revealed a sixfold increase of IL-1 activity in the macrophage supernatants of staggerer mutant mice. The hyperproduction was found in 3-week to 1-year-old staggerer and also in heterozygous (+/sg) mice. A similar phenomenon existed in cerebellar mutants lurcher, Purkinje cell degeneration (pcd), and to a lesser extent reeler and wobbler, but was absent in the neurological mutants weaver, jimpy, and motor end plate disease (medH). These observations establish that in several point mutations in mice, central nervous degeneration is associated with dysregulation of IL-1 production by peripheral macrophages.  相似文献   

6.
Many similarities of both the inheritance pattern and the neuropathology can be observed between olivopontocerebellar atrophies, or so-called multiple system atrophies (MSAs), and murine cerebellar mutations like Purkinje cell degeneration, nervous, staggerer, weaver, and reeler. Our study aimed to test whether the glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) deficiency observed in some MSA patients could be found also in any of the murine mutants. GDH activity was assayed in several organs of these mutants, and no general deficiency was detected. By contrast, the level was found to be elevated in the cerebellum. The GDH gene was localized on mouse chromosome 14 and does not map close to any known neurological mutation in the mouse. We conclude, for the moment, that none of these cerebellar mutant mice can be considered as an animal model for GDH-deficient MSA.  相似文献   

7.
Adenosine A1 Receptors Are Associated with Cerebellar Granule Cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The cerebellum of mouse appears to have only the adenosine A1 receptor, which decreases adenylate cyclase activity, and not the A2 receptor, which increases adenylate cyclase activity. The adenosine analog N6-(L-phenylisopropyl)adenosine (PIA), stimulates the A1 receptor in a membrane preparation and decreases basal adenylate cyclase activity by 40%. The EC50 for PIA is approximately 50 nM. To associate the A1 receptor with a cerebellar cell type, three different neurological mutant mouse strains were studied: staggerer (Purkinje and granule cell defect), nervous (Purkinje cell defect), and weaver (granule cell defect). PIA was unable to effect a maximal decrease in adenylate cyclase activity of membranes prepared from cerebella of the staggerer and weaver mice in comparison with the respective littermate control mice. In contrast, membranes from nervous mice and their littermates showed similar PIA dose-response curves. Moreover, the diminished PIA response observed in the weaver cerebellum, when compared with the control littermate, was not detected in the striatum. This suggests no overall brain defect in the adenosine A1 receptors coupled to adenylate cyclase of the weaver mouse. We conclude that a loss of granule cells coincides with an attenuated response to PIA, implying that the A1 receptors are associated with the granule cells of the cerebellum.  相似文献   

8.
A study was made to compare alterations in the cerebral contents of nucleic acids and protein of several mouse strains affected by different neurological mutations: jimpy, msd, quaking, reeler, weaver, and dwarf. In normal and affected jimpy and msd mice the brain components analyzed were very similar. On the other hand, the cerebral hemispheres of quaking mice showed significant decreases in total RNA and DNA, when compared with those of normal littermates. In the affected reeler and weaver mice, total protein, RNA, and DNA in the cerebellum differed markedly from controls. Protein decreased slightly, whereas nucleic acids showed no significant variation in the cerebral hemispheres of the same mutants. The cerebella and cerebral hemispheres of affected dwarf mice had wet weights and total protein contents that were about 20% lower than those of their controls; DNA did not vary significantly in the various brain regions analyzed. The decrease of DNA we report in reeler and weaver mutant cerebellum in toto quantifies the lack of cell number, in contrast to histological studies which give only semiquantitative information.  相似文献   

9.
Muscarinic Binding Sites in Developing Normal and Mutant Mouse Cerebellum   总被引:5,自引:5,他引:0  
Abstract: The development of [3H]quinuclidinylbenzilate ([3H]QNB) binding to cerebellar homogenates of weaver (wv), reeler (rl), staggerer (sg) and jimpy (jp) mutants, in addition to their normal counterparts, was observed. The maximum increase in binding in normal mice occurred postnatally, during the period 5 to 15 days. [3H]QNB binding was significantly reduced in wv, rl and sg mutants (40–50% of control) but was not so markedly affected in jp (80–100% control). Binding was saturable with an apparent K d of 0.15 nM and the affinity of [3H]QNB for its receptor was not affected during the course of development or as a result of the mutation. The presence of significant numbers of binding sites in the agranular mutants suggests that QNB binding sites are localised on cells other than the granule neurons. The possibility of synaptic reorganisation is also discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Distinctive activities of various glycosidases were expressed in the cerebellum and cerebral cortex of mice during their development. In particular, N-acetyl-beta-D-hexosaminidase (EC 3.2.1.30) appeared to be developmentally regulated. A transient peak of enzyme activity at postnatal day 7 was characteristic for the cerebellum, whereas the activity in the cerebral cortex gradually increased through the 1st postnatal month and was maintained at a high level of activity throughout adulthood. The regulation of N-acetylhexosaminidase activity in the developing cerebellum of the staggerer mouse deviated clearly from enzyme activities in the wild-type, whereas the activity pattern in the staggerer cerebral cortex remained unaffected. In experiments mixing wild-type and staggerer cerebellum homogenates, the specific activity was additive. Thus, involvement of inhibitors or activating molecules can be excluded. This developmentally controlled regulation or disregulation in staggerer appears to be enzyme specific, sine beta-glucosidase, alpha-glucosidase, and beta-galactosidase did not exhibit such a pattern in either normal or staggerer mice. In the mutation weaver that, like staggerer, loses the majority of its cerebellar granule cells, N-acetyl-beta-hexosaminidase activity of the cerebellum was not elevated, indicating a specific defect in staggerer rather than a general effect on lysosomal enzymes due to cell death.  相似文献   

11.
The ontogeny of cell adhesion molecule L1 in cerebellum was quantitatively assessed in weaver and reeler mutant mice and in heterozygous litter-mate controls. In the latter the concentration and the amount of L1 both increased from the first postnatal week to become maximum at the second. In contrast, in the weaver and reeler neurologic mutant mice, L1 decreased steadily. The L1 concentration and the amount of L1 was lower in the cerebellum of homozygous mutant mice than in litter-mate controls. The findings are consistent with L1 being a component of axonal plasma membranes. However, no evidence was found of any direct effect of thewv andrl phenotypes on L1 expression.  相似文献   

12.
Intracellular recordings from Purkinje cells (PC) in the cerebellum of adult staggerer mutant mice revealed that the orthodromic response of PCs to juxtafastigial (JF) stimulation closely resembled a climbing fiber response (CFR). However, for most of the PCs studied, these responses were graded in a stepwise manner when the stimulus strength was increased. The underlying excitatory synaptic potentials (EPSPs) had the typical shape of EPSPs mediated through climbing fibers (CFs), but their size fluctuated in discrete steps, the highest one reaching the firing level. In the same PCs, the size of the spontaneous EPSPs fluctuated in a similar fashion and the frequency of each step was in the range of CF-mediated EPSPs. These results strongly suggest that in staggerer mice several CFs synapse with each PC instead of a single CF as in normal adults. Furthermore, the activation through some of these CFs does not reach the firing level of the corresponding PC.  相似文献   

13.
The developmental expression and intracellular localization of a cerebellum-characteristic 250-kDa glycoprotein, P400 protein, were studied by immunohistochemical and immunoblot methods using a monoclonal antibody against P400 protein. In the cerebellum of normal mouse, the expression of P400 protein increased from Postnatal Day 3 to Day 21. This enhancement of P400 protein expression occurred only in the Purkinje cells and proceeded with the growth of their dendritic arborization. Electron microscopic analysis indicated that P400 protein is present at the plasma membrane, the endoplasmic reticulum, and the postsynaptic densities of Purkinje cells. Immunohistochemistry of the cerebella of neurological mutant mice indicated that the Purkinje cells of reeler, weaver, and pcd mutant mice retain the ability to produce a large amount of P400 protein. However, the Purkinje cells of staggerer mutant mouse proved to be incapable of enhanced P400 protein expression. These results indicate that P400 protein is a Purkinje cell-characteristic plasma membrane-associated glycoprotein, which is also present at the postsynaptic density and endoplasmic reticulum and that the expression of P400 protein in Purkinje cells is closely associated with the growth of their dendritic arborization.  相似文献   

14.
A monoclonal antibody designated anti-Cl was obtained from a hybridoma clone isolated from a fusion of NS1 myeloma with spleen cells from BALB/c mice injected with homogenate of white matter from bovine corpus callosum. In the adult mouse neuroectoderm, C1 antigen is detectable by indirect immunohistology in the processes of Bergmann glial cells (also called Golgi epithelial cells) in the cerebellum and of Muller cells in the retina, whereas other astrocytes that express glial fibrillary acidic protein in these brain areas are negative for C1. In addition, C1 antigen is expressed in most, if not all, ependymal cells and in large blood vessels, but not capillaries. In the developing, early postnatal cerebellum, C1 antigen is not confined to Bergmann glial and ependymal cells but is additionally present in astrocytes of presumptive white matter and Purkinje cell layer. In the embryonic neuroectoderm, C1 antigen is already expressed at day 10, the earliest stage tested so far. The antigen is distinguished in radially oriented structures in telencephalon, pons, pituitary anlage, and retina. Ventricular cells are not labeled by C1 antibody at this stage. C1 antigen is not detectable in astrocytes of adult or nearly adult cerebella from the neurological mutant mice staggerer, reeler, and weaver, but is present in ependymal cells and large blood vessels. C1 antigen is expressed not only in the intact animal but also in cultured cerebellar astrocytes and fibroblastlike cells. It is localized intracellularly.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The dopamine innervation of the frontal cortex originates in the A9 and A10 mesencephalic dopamine cell groups. In weaver mutant mice, there is a 77% frontocortical dopamine deficiency associated with losses of dopamine neurones in areas A9 and A10. The dopamine-depleted cortical areas of weaver mutant mice are receptive to reinnervation by afferent fibres originating in dopamine-containing mesencephalic grafts from normal donor embryos. In the anteromedial frontal lobe, reinnervation by tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactive fibres is largely confined to the basal cortical layers whereas in the anterior cingulate cortex, tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactive fibres also occupy superficial layers, including the molecular layer. Normally, the dopaminergic innervation of the anteromedial frontal lobe is distributed among the basal cortical layers (IV–VI), and the dopaminergic innervation of the cingulate cortex occupies both basal and superficial cortical layers. The pattern of innervation following transplantation indicates that, in repopulating dopamine-deficient cortical areas of recipient weaver mutants, graft-derived dopamine fibres show a preference for those layers which are normally invested by dopamine afferents.  相似文献   

16.
Serotonin (5-HT) uptake sites, or transporters, were measured in the neostriatum (caudate putamen) of wild type (+/+) mice and heterozygous (wv/+) and homozygous (wv/wv) weaver, as well as in heterozygous Lurcher (Lc/+) mutants. These topological surveys were carried out by quantitative ligand binding autoradiography using the uptake site antagonist [3H]-citalopram as a probe of innervation densities in four quadrants of the rostral neostriatum and in two halves of the caudal neostriatum. In addition, tissue concentrations of 5-HT, 5-hydroxyindole-3-acetic acid and 5-hydroxytryptophol were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection in these neostriatal divisions. In +/+ mice and in Lc/+ mutants there was a dorso-ventral gradient of increasing 5-HT levels, and they exhibited a similar heterogeneity of [3H]-citalopram labeling. In contrast, the gradients of 5-HT concentrations and [3H]-citalopram binding disappeared in the weaver mutants, suggesting a rearrangement of the 5-HT innervation. This reorganization of the 5-HT system in the neostriatum was more obvious in the wv/wv and is compatible with the hypothesis that the postnatal dopaminergic deficiencies that characterize weaver mutants lead to a sprouting of fibers and thus constitute a genetic model of dopaminergic denervation that leads to a 5-HT hyperinnervation.  相似文献   

17.
It is shown here that glycolipids of the sulfoglucuronyl neolacto series (SGGLs) are present in the adult rodent cerebellum. SGGLs were not detected in the cerebellar murine mutants lurcher, Purkinje cell degeneration, and staggerer, in which Purkinje cell loss is the primary defect. SGGLs were present, however, in normal amounts in weaver and reeler mutants, in which there is a major and relatively specific loss of granule cells without obvious deficiency in Purkinje cells. In the myelin-deficient quaking mutant, the expression of SGGLs also was nearly normal. The loss of SGGLs in Purkinje cell-deficient mutants was specific, since most of the major lipids were not affected significantly and only the percentage composition of other lipids, such as sulfatides and gangliosides, was altered in the mutants. These and other results strongly suggest that SGGLs and other glycolipids of the paragloboside family are localized specifically in Purkinje cells and their arbors in the adult cerebellum. This is the first demonstration of the localization of a specific glycolipid and its analogs in a specific cell type in the nervous system.  相似文献   

18.
The ATP-dependent glutamate uptake system in synaptic vesicles prepared from mouse cerebellum was characterized, and the levels of glutamate uptake were investigated in the cerebellar mutant mice, staggerer and weaver, whose main defect is the loss of cerebellar granule cells, and the nervous mutant, whose main defect is the loss of Purkinje cells. The ATP-dependent glutamate uptake is stimulated by low concentrations of chloride, is insensitive to aspartate, and is inhibited by agents known to dissipate the electrochemical proton gradient. These properties are similar to those of the glutamate uptake system observed in the highly purified synaptic vesicles prepared from bovine cortex. The ATP-dependent glutamate uptake system is reduced by 68% in the staggerer and 57-67% in the weaver mutant; these reductions parallel the substantial loss of granule cells in those mutants. In contrast, the cerebellar levels of glutamate uptake are not altered significantly in the nervous mutant, which has lost Purkinje cells, but not granule cells. In view of evidence that granule cells are glutamatergic neurons and Purkinje cells are GABAergic neurons, these observations support the notion that the ATP-dependent glutamate uptake system is present in synaptic vesicles of glutamatergic neurons.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract: The cerebellar levels of Protein I, a synapse-specific neuronal phosphoprotein, have been investigated in the cerebellar mouse mutants staggerer ( sg ), weaver ( wv ), nervous ( nr ), and Purkinje cell degeneration ( pcd ). The Protein I concentration was reduced by about 66% in sg and wv mutants, representing a 90% loss of Protein I per cerebellum. A heterozygote effect was observed in the wv mutant. These results indicate that a great majority of Protein I in the normal cerebellum may be present in the granule cells. in nr mutants the cerebellar Protein I concentration was reduced by only 12% in 62-day-old mice, suggesting that Purkinje cells contribute little to cerebellar Protein I. However, a greater reduction was observed in pcd mutants, which may reflect on the nature of the pcd mutation.  相似文献   

20.
Free amino acids and cholinergic enzymes were investigated in the cerebellum of reeler and weaver mice in an attempt to identify the neurotransmitter characteristic of the granule cell population and to clarify any neurotransmitter abnormalities of their pre- and postsynaptic neurons induced by their depletion. The data indicate that glutamic acid may be the neurotransmitter of the granule cells. Pre- and postsynaptic neurotransmitter activity seemed not to be markedly altered in cerebellar granule cell dysgenesis.  相似文献   

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