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. 1997 Jun 1;17(11):4190–4200. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.17-11-04190.1997

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2.

Morphological studies of normal andTrJ sciatic nerves. Microscopic sections at equivalent magnifications from normal (A,D), heterozygous TrJ(B, E, F), and homozygous TrJ(C) sciatic nerves from 10-d-old (AC, F) and adult (D, E) mice are shown. Note the marked increase in axon caliber and myelin thickness during nerve development between normal (A, D) andTrJ/+ mice (B,E). Also note the increasing severity of dysmyelination, even at 10 d of age between the +/+,TrJ/+, andTrJ/TrJnerves (AC, respectively). Homozygous TrJ have only small amounts of myelin (C, arrows). AdultTrJ/+ animals have increased endoneurial connective tissue (E, brown material) and occasional tomaculae are observed (bold arrow). Myelinic debris (arrowhead) can be found in longitudinal sections from 10-d-old TrJ/+ animals (F). Scale bar, 20 μm.