Aggregation chimeras demonstrate that the primary defect responsible for aganglionic megacolon in lethal spotted mice is not neuroblast autonomous
Open Access
- 1 March 1993
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Development
- Vol. 117 (3) , 993-999
- https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.117.3.993
Abstract
The lethal spotted (ls) mouse has been used as a model for the human disorder Hirschsprung’s disease, because as in the latter condition, ls/ls homozygotes are born without ganglion cells in their terminal colons and, without surgical intervention, die early as a consequence of intestinal obstruction. Previous studies have led to the conclusion that hereditary aganglionosis in ls/ls mice occurs because neural crest-derived enteric neuroblasts fail to colonize the distal large intestine during embryogenesis, perhaps due to a primary defect in non-neuroblastic mesenchyme rather than migrating neuroblasts themselves. In this investigation, the latter issue was addressed directly, in vivo, by comparing the distributions of ls/ls and wild-type neurons in aggregation chimeras. Expression of a transgene, D H-nlacZ, in enteric neurons derived from the vagal neural crest, was used as a marker for ls/ls enteric neurons in chimeric mice. In these animals, when greater than 20% of the cells were wild-type, the ls/ls phenotype was rescued; such mice were neither spotted nor aganglionic. In addition, these ‘rescued’ mice had mixtures of ls/ls and wildtype neurons throughout their gastrointestinal systems including distal rectum. In contrast, mice with smaller relative numbers of wild-type cells exhibited the classic ls/ls phenotype. The aganglionic terminal bowel of the latter mice contained neither ls/ls nor wild-type neurons. These results confirm that the primary defect in ls/ls embryos is not autonomous to enteric neuroblasts, but instead exists in the non-neuroblastic mesenchyme of the large intestine.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- The dopamine β-hydroxylase gene promoter directs expression of E. coli lacZ to sympathetic and other neurons in adult transgenic miceNeuron, 1991
- Transiently catecholaminergic (TC) cells in the bowel of the fetal rat: Precursors of noncatecholaminergic enteric neuronsDevelopmental Biology, 1990
- Formation and malformation of the enteric nervous system in mice: An organ culture studyJournal of Pediatric Surgery, 1990
- Colonization of the avian hindgut by cells derived from the sacral neural crestDevelopmental Biology, 1990
- Analysis of Cellular Mosaicism in a Transgenic Mouse by Histological In Situ HybridizationDevelopment, Growth & Differentiation, 1988
- Piebaldism‐Waardenburg syndrome: Histopathologic evidence for a neural crest syndromeAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics, 1988
- Accumulation of components of basal laminae: Association with the failure of neural crest cells to colonize the presumptive aganglionic bowel of mutant miceDevelopmental Biology, 1988
- Inability of neural crest cells to colonize the presumptive aganglionic bowel of ls/ls mutant mice: Requirement for a permissive microenvironmentJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1987
- Abnormalities of smooth muscle, basal laminae, and nerves in the aganglionic segments of the bowel of lethal spotted mutant miceThe Anatomical Record, 1986
- Differential regulation of metallothionein-thymidine kinase fusion genes in transgenic mice and their offspringCell, 1982