Abstract

To undertake the first ultrastructural characterization of human retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) differentiation from fetal development to adolescence. Ten fetal eyes and three eyes aged six, nine, and 17 years were examined in the temporal retina adjacent to the optic nerve head by transmission electron microscopy. The area, number, and distribution of RPE organelles were quantified and interpreted within the context of adjacent photoreceptors, Bruch's membrane, and choriocapillaris maturation. Between eight to 12 weeks' gestation (WG), pseudostratified columnar epithelia with apical tight junctions differentiate to a simple cuboidal epithelium with random distribution of melanosomes and mitochondria. Between 12 to 26 WG, cells enlarge and show long apical microvilli and apicolateral junctional complexes. Coinciding with eye opening at 26 WG, melanosomes migrate apically whereas mitochondria distribute to perinuclear regions, with the first appearance of phagosomes, complex granules, and basolateral extracellular space (BES) formation. Significantly, autophagy and heterophagy, as evidenced by organelle recycling, and the gold standard of ultrastructural evidence for autophagy of double-membrane autophagosomes and mitophagosomes were evident from 32 WG, followed by basal infoldings of RPE cell membrane at 36 WG. Lipofuscin formation and deposition into the BES evident at six years increased at 17 years. We provide compelling ultrastructural evidence that heterophagy and autophagy begins in the third trimester of human fetal development and that deposition of cellular byproducts into the extracellular space of RPE takes place via exocytosis. Transplanted RPE cells must also demonstrate the capacity to subserve autophagic and heterophagic functions for effective disease mitigation.

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