Genetically determined variation in the azygos vein in the mouse
- 1 December 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Teratology
- Vol. 44 (6), 675-683
- https://doi.org/10.1002/tera.1420440610
Abstract
The normal mouse is expected to have a single and left‐sided azygos vein that develops from the paired embryonic cardinal venous system and drains most of the right and left thoracic walls into the left anterior vena cava. During routine autopsies of adult mice, most individuals of the C57BL/6J strain were found to have this pattern but a distribution of different azygos venous patterns was found in the WB/ReJ strain. In WB/ReJ the patterns varied from a single unpaired vein on the right side that connected to the right anterior vena cava through bilaterally symmetrical and paired veins to the expected unpaired vein on the left side. A classification scheme for the observed patterns of azygos veins was developed and the frequency distributions of C57BL/6J and WB/ReJ mice in these classes were compared. The strain difference in the azygos venous system between C57BL/6J and WB/ReJ can be interpreted as a genetically determined threshold trait of development. Beginning with a paired and symmetrical cardinal venous system, the C57BL/6J genotype shifts to a left‐sided azygos pattern but the WB/ReJ genotype remains with a more bilateral azygos pattern. Genetic study of this azygos trait will be useful for the study of lateral asymmetries in mammalian development and for the interpretation of venous heterotaxies (anomalous placement of veins) in the mouse that are found in association with mutations such as situs inversus viscerum (iv) and dominant hemimelia (Dh).Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- AnatomyPublished by Elsevier ,1983
- Random determination of a developmental process: Reversal of normal visceral asymmetry in the mouseJournal of Heredity, 1976
- A defect of the splanchnic mesoderm caused by the mutant gene dominant hemimelia in the mouseDevelopmental Biology, 1967
- The genetics and morphology of two ‘luxoid’ mutants in the house mouseGenetics Research, 1964
- Anomalous inferior vena cava with azygos continuation (infrahepatic interruption of the inferior vena cava)The Journal of Pediatrics, 1961
- VISCERAL INVERSION AND ASSOCIATED ANOMALIES IN THE MOUSEJournal of Heredity, 1959
- SELECTION AND INBREEDING FOR LONGEVITY OF A LETHAL TYPEJournal of Heredity, 1959