Abstract
Adult zebrafish possess the remarkable capacity to regenerate neurons. In the damaged zebrafish retina, Müller glia reprogram and divide to produce neuronal progenitor cells (NPCs) that proliferate and differentiate into both lost neuronal cell types and those unaffected by the damage stimulus, which suggests that developmental specification/differentiation programs might be recapitulated during regeneration. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction revealed that developmental competence factors are expressed following photoreceptor damage induced by intense light or in a genetic rod photoreceptor cell ablation model. In both light- and N-Methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA)-damaged adult zebrafish retinas, NPCs, but not proliferating Müller glia, expressed fluorescent reporters controlled by promoters of ganglion (atoh7), amacrine (ptf1a), bipolar (vsx1), or red cone photoreceptor cell competence factors (thrb) in a temporal expression sequence. In both damage paradigms, atoh7:GFP was expressed first, followed by ptf1a:EGFP and lastly, vsx1:GFP, whereas thrb:Tomato was observed in NPCs at the same time as ptf1a:GFP following light damage but shifted alongside vsx1:GFP in the NMDA-damaged retina. Moreover, HuC/D, indicative of ganglion and amacrine cell differentiation, colocalized with atoh7:GFP prior to ptf1a:GFP expression in the ganglion cell layer, which was followed by Zpr-1 expression (red/green cone photoreceptors) in thrb:Tomato-positive cells in the outer nuclear layer in both damage paradigms, mimicking the developmental differentiation sequence. However, comparing NMDA- to light-damaged retinas, the fraction of PCNA-positive cells expressing atoh7:GFP increased, that of thrb:Tomato and vsx1:GFP decreased, and that of ptf1a:GFP remained similar. To summarize, developmental cell specification programs were recapitulated during retinal regeneration, which adapted to account for the cell type lost.
Highlights
The majority of neurons produced during nervous system development function throughout the organism’s lifetime
We demonstrate that expression of the developmental competence factors, atoh7, ptf1a, and prdm1a, required for generating ganglion, amacrine, and photoreceptor cells, increased following photoreceptor loss
Expression of neuronal maturation markers in transgene expressing cells further supported that ganglion cell generation commenced prior to amacrine cells, which was followed by red cone photoreceptor cells
Summary
The majority of neurons produced during nervous system development function throughout the organism’s lifetime. It was recently demonstrated that the arising NPCs differentiate into lost neurons, and other neuronal cell types of the retina (Figure 1; Lahne et al, 2015; D’Orazi et al, 2016; Powell et al, 2016; Ng Chi Kei et al, 2017). This raises the question whether NPCs behave similar to retinal progenitors during development that produce all retinal cell types in a temporally regulated manner?
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