Previous pathological reports have indicated that swollen and
vacuolated motoneuron cell bodies are the
most predominant feature characterising Wobbler mouse motoneuron disease,
but there has been little
supportive evidence using area measurements. The present study focuses
on
the possible role of changes in
neuronal nuclear and perikaryal volumes in the cervical spinal cord
ventral horn, using new and traditional
stereological probes which provide unbiased estimates of volume. Semithin
sections from the ventral horn of
Wobbler mice and age and sex-matched phenotypically normal littermates
were examined at 2 ages (young
and old). The young Wobbler group had significantly larger volume
weighted mean perikaryal volumes
compared with age-matched controls, reflecting the presence of large
swollen cells characteristic of this
group; this situation was reversed in the control group. Number-weighted
perikaryal volume estimates in the
old Wobbler group were smaller than in age-matched controls. The
variation in perikaryal volume was
greatest in the young Wobbler group in which the coefficient of
variation was 127%. The mean number
weighted and volume weighted mean nuclear volumes were significantly
smaller in the old Wobbler group
compared with age-matched controls and young Wobbler groups. The application
of new stereological
probes has enabled us to document more precisely these changes in
neuronal structure in the Wobbler mutant mouse.