Abstract
We have previously shown that mice lacking the protein kinase B-RAF have defects in both neural and endothelial cell lineages and die around embryonic day 12 (E12). To delineate the function of B-RAF in the brain, B-RAF KIN/KIN mice lacking B-RAF and expressing A-RAF under the control of the B-RAF locus were created. B-RAF KIN/KIN embryos displayed no vascular defects, no endothelial and neuronal apoptosis, or gross developmental abnormalities, and a significant proportion of these animals survived for up to 8 weeks. Cell proliferation in the neocortex was reduced from E14.5 onwards. Newborn cortical neurons were impaired in their migration toward the cortical plate, causing a depletion of Brn-2-expressing pyramidal neurons in layers II, III, and V of the postnatal cortex. Our data reveal that B-RAF is an important mediator of neuronal survival, migration, and dendrite formation and that A-RAF cannot fully compensate for these functions.
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CITATION STYLE
Camarero, G., Tyrsin, O. Y., Xiang, C., Pfeiffer, V., Pleiser, S., Wiese, S., … Rapp, U. R. (2006). Cortical Migration Defects in Mice Expressing A-RAF from the B-RAF Locus. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 26(19), 7103–7115. https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.00424-06
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