1. Simultaneous Requirements forHes1in Retinal Neurogenesis and Optic Cup–Stalk Boundary Maintenance
- Author
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Ryoichiro Kageyama, Nadean L. Brown, Myung Soon Moon, and Bernadett Bosze
- Subjects
endocrine system ,0303 health sciences ,Retina ,genetic structures ,General Neuroscience ,Neurogenesis ,Biology ,Optic cup (anatomical) ,eye diseases ,Cell biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Retinal ganglion cell ,embryonic structures ,Eye development ,Optic nerve ,medicine ,Optic stalk ,sense organs ,Muller glia ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
The bHLH transcription factorHes1is a key downstream effector for the Notch signaling pathway. During embryogenesis neural progenitors express low levels of Hes1 in an oscillating pattern, whereas glial brain boundary regions (e.g., isthmus) have high, sustained Hes1 levels that suppress neuronal fates. Here, we show that in the embryonic mouse retina, the optic nerve head and stalk express high Hes1, with the ONH constituting a boundary between the neural retina and glial cells that ultimately line the optic stalk. Using two Cre drivers with distinct spatiotemporal expression we conditionally inactivatedHes1, to delineate the requirements for this transcriptional repressor during retinal neurogenesis versus patterning of the optic cup and stalk. Throughout retinal neurogenesis,Hes1maintains proliferation and blocks retinal ganglion cell formation, but surprisingly we found it also promotes cone photoreceptor genesis. In the postnatal eye,Hes1inactivation with Rax-Cre resulted in increased bipolar neurons and a mispositioning of Müller glia. Our results indicate that Notch pathway regulation of cone genesis is more complex than previously assumed, and reveal a novel role forHes1in maintaining the optic cup–stalk boundary.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTThe bHLH repressor Hes1 regulates the timing of neurogenesis, rate of progenitor cell division, gliogenesis, and maintains tissue compartment boundaries. This study expands current eye development models by showing Notch-independent roles for Hes1 in the developing optic nerve head (ONH). Defects in ONH formation result in optic nerve coloboma; our work now inserts Hes1 into the genetic hierarchy regulating optic fissure closure. Given that Hes1 acts analogously in the ONH as the brain isthmus, it prompts future investigation of the ONH as a signaling factor center, or local organizer. Embryonic development of the ONH region has been poorly studied, which is surprising given it is where the pan-ocular disease glaucoma is widely believed to inflict damage on RGC axons.
- Published
- 2020
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