Defective development of the thymus and immunological abnormalities in the neurological mouse mutation 'staggerer'

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Abstract

The autosomal recessive mouse mutation 'staggerer' (sg/sg), located on chromosome 9, has been recognized as a neurological mutant because of movement abnormalities and defective cerebellar development. The authors show here that the sg/sg mutation not only affects the development of the cerebellum, but also causes developmental and regulatory changes of the immune system: They observed, on gross inspection, a marked delay in the development of sg/sg thymus, generally enlarged lymph nodes, and undersized spleens. When immunized with SRBC, the sg/sg mouse generated, in normal proportions, helper T-cells in vivo and antibody-forming B-cells in vitro; however, a delay in terminating the response and a deficiency in generating suppressor cells was noted. This suggests the existence of a defect in regulatory feedback mechanisms. The marked delay in the growth of the thymus gland was associated with the prolonged existence of cell-surface carbohydrate patterns characteristic of immature thymocytes. The prolonged expression of embryonal cell-surface phenotypes was observed on the surface of cerebellum and thymus (and, to some extent, spleen) but not in cells from other organs.

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Trenkner, E., & Hoffmann, M. K. (1986). Defective development of the thymus and immunological abnormalities in the neurological mouse mutation “staggerer.” Journal of Neuroscience, 6(6), 1733–1737. https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.06-06-01733.1986

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