1. Retinal and anterior eye compartments derive from a common progenitor pool in the avian optic cup.
- Author
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Venters SJ, Cuenca PD, and Hyer J
- Subjects
- Animals, Birds, Cell Differentiation physiology, Chick Embryo, Ciliary Body embryology, Fluorescent Dyes, Green Fluorescent Proteins genetics, Iris embryology, Microinjections, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Pigment Epithelium of Eye embryology, Plasmids, Retina embryology, Retroviridae, Ciliary Body cytology, Iris cytology, Morphogenesis physiology, Multipotent Stem Cells cytology, Pigment Epithelium of Eye cytology, Retina cytology
- Abstract
Purpose: The optic cup is created through invagination of the optic vesicle. The morphogenetic rearrangement creates a double-layered cup, with a hinge (the Optic Cup Lip) where the epithelium bends back upon itself. Shortly after the optic cup forms, it is thought to be sub-divided into separate lineages: i) pigmented epithelium in the outer layer; ii) presumptive iris and ciliary body at the most anterior aspect of the inner layer; and iii) presumptive neural retina in the remainder of the inner layer. We test the native developmental potential of the anterior cup to determine if it normally contributes to the retina., Methods: Vital dye and green fluorescent protein (GFP) expressing replication-incompetent retroviral vectors were used to label cells in the nascent optic cup and follow their direct progeny throughout development. Label was applied to either the optic cup lip (n=40), or to the domain just posterior to the lip (n=20). Retroviral labeling is a permanent lineage marker and enabled the analysis of advanced stages of development., Results: Labeling within the optic cup gave rise to labeled progeny in the posterior optic cup that differentiated as neural retina (20 of 20). In contrast, labeling cells in the optic cup lip gave rise to progeny of labeled cells arrayed in a linear progression, from the lip into the neural retina (36 of 40). Label was retained in cells at the optic cup lip, regardless of age at examination. In older embryos, labeled progeny delaminated from the optic cup lip to differentiate as muscle of the pupillary margin., Conclusions: The data show that the cells at the optic cup lip are a common progenitor population for pigmented epithelium, anterior eye tissues (ciliary body, iris, and pupillary muscle) and retinal neurons. The findings are supportive of an interpretation where the optic cup lip is a specialized niche containing a multipotent progenitor population.
- Published
- 2011