Abstract

BackgroundRegeneration of neurons in the central nervous system is poor in humans. In other vertebrates neural regeneration does occur efficiently and involves reactivation of developmental processes. Within the neural retina of zebrafish, Müller glia are the main stem cell source and are capable of generating progenitors to replace lost neurons after injury. However, it remains largely unknown to what extent Müller glia and neuron differentiation mirror development.MethodsFollowing neural ablation in the zebrafish retina, dividing cells were tracked using a prolonged labelling technique. We investigated to what extent extrinsic feedback influences fate choices in two injury models, and whether fate specification follows the histogenic order observed in development.ResultsBy comparing two injury paradigms that affect different subpopulations of neurons, we found a dynamic adaptability of fate choices during regeneration. Both injuries followed a similar time course of cell death, and activated Müller glia proliferation. However, these newly generated cells were initially biased towards replacing specifically the ablated cell types, and subsequently generating all cell types as the appropriate neuron proportions became re-established. This dynamic behaviour has implications for shaping regenerative processes and ensuring restoration of appropriate proportions of neuron types regardless of injury or cell type lost.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that regenerative fate processes are more flexible than development processes. Compared to development fate specification we observed a disruption in stereotypical birth order of neurons during regeneration Understanding such feedback systems can allow us to direct regenerative fate specification in injury and diseases to regenerate specific neuron types in vivo.

Highlights

  • Regeneration of neurons in the central nervous system is poor in humans

  • Cell death in distinct neural populations can be efficiently targeted by specificity of injury In zebrafish, after the initial developmental wave (first 72 h postfertilisation [44, 45]), growth via developmental neurogenesis continues in the very peripheral edge in a specialised niche termed the ciliary margin zone (CMZ) [reviewed in 7, 12]

  • Regenerative neurogenesis can be studied in the spatially separate mature/adult retina, which allowed us to established a nitroreductase-metronidazole induced ablation model targeted at ablating inhibitory retinal neurons, namely horizontal and amacrine cells at 7 dpf

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Regeneration of neurons in the central nervous system is poor in humans. In other vertebrates neural regeneration does occur efficiently and involves reactivation of developmental processes. Within the neural retina of zebrafish, Müller glia are the main stem cell source and are capable of generating progenitors to replace lost neurons after injury. All vertebrates show some potential for neural regeneration in the central nervous system, including the retina. In lower vertebrates, such as zebrafish, the adult retina contains multiple neurogenic cell sources including progenitors in the ciliary margin zone, and Müller glia [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Retinal injuries activate Müller glia to de-differentiate and reactivate neurodevelopmental gene expression cascades in zebrafish [7,8,9,10,11,12,13].

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call