Subdivision of mouse vibrissae on an embryological basis, with descriptions of variations in the number and arrangement of sinus hairs and cortical barrels in BALB/c (nu/+; nude, nu/nu) and hairless (hr/hr) strains
- 1 June 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Anatomy
- Vol. 155 (2) , 153-173
- https://doi.org/10.1002/aja.1001550202
Abstract
Development of vibrissae was studied in dd/y mouse embryos by scanning electron microscopy. Arrangement of vibrissae and cortical barrels were also studied by light microscopy in adult dd/y, BALB/c(nu/+), nude (BALB/c,nu/nu) and hairless (hr/hr) mice to find genetic or epigenetic variations. Rudiments of vibrissae first appear on Day 12 of pregnancy as longitudinal ridges on the developing muzzle, and each hair rudiment is represented by a dome on the ridges. The dorsal two rows (A and B; Woolsey and Van der Loos, 1970) of mystacial vibrissae are on the lateral nasal prominence, while the ventral three (C, D and E) are on the maxillary prominence. Smaller hairs of mystacial vibrissae appear at the labial part of the maxillary prominence on Day 13. The rudiments of rhinal hairs also appear at this stage on the part of the muzzle derived from the medial nasal prominence. Thus the so-called mystacial vibrissae should be subdivided into three (or 4, including the rhinal) groups on an embryological basis. They are the lateral nasal, the maxillary and the labial. A supernumerary sinus hair and a corresponding barrel was observed between B and C rows uni- or bilaterally in one third of individuals of BALB/c, nude and hairless mice. It is suggested that supernumerary hairs tend to occur between the groups of hairs as defined above. In nude and hairless mice small barrels representing labial hairs are diminished in number. The number of hair follicles, however, is normal.This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Does the skin tell the somatosensory cortex how to construct a map of the periphery?Neuroscience Letters, 1978
- Structure of the sinus hair follicle in the big‐clawed shrew, Sorex unguiculatusJournal of Morphology, 1977
- Arrangement and structure of sinus hair muscles in the big-clawed shrew,Sorex unguiculatusJournal of Morphology, 1977
- Responses evoked in mouse and rat SI cortex by vibrissa stimulationNeuroscience Letters, 1976
- Comparative anatomical studies of the Sml face cortex with special reference to the occurrence of “barrels” in layer IVJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1975
- Morphological adaptation in developing vibrissae of ratsCells Tissues Organs, 1970
- An In Vitro Study of Hair and Vibrissae Development in Embryonic Mouse Skin**From the Department of Zoology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 1966
- Nonproliferation in dermal condensations of mouse vibrissae and pelage hairsDevelopmental Biology, 1965
- Morphology and proliferation during early feather developmentDevelopmental Biology, 1965
- New observations on hair loss in the hairless mouseThe Anatomical Record, 1961