NEURAL INJURY, REPAIR, AND ADAPTATION IN THE GI TRACT III - ROLE OF THE RET SIGNAL-TRANSDUCTION PATHWAY IN DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAMMALIAN ENTERIC NERVOUS-SYSTEM
V. Pachnis et al., NEURAL INJURY, REPAIR, AND ADAPTATION IN THE GI TRACT III - ROLE OF THE RET SIGNAL-TRANSDUCTION PATHWAY IN DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAMMALIAN ENTERIC NERVOUS-SYSTEM, American journal of physiology: Gastrointestinal and liver physiology, 38(2), 1998, pp. 183-186
The enteric nervous system (ENS) in vertebrates is derived from the ne
ural crest and constitutes the most complex part of the peripheral ner
vous system. Natural and induced mutagenesis in mammals has shown that
the tyrosine kinase receptor RET and its functional ligand glial cell
line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) play key roles in the develop
ment of the ENS in humans and mice. We have developed and briefly desc
ribe here a number of assays that analyze the specific function of the
RET receptor and its ligand. Our data suggest that the RET signal tra
nsduction pathway has multiple roles in the development of the mammali
an ENS.