Atoh7-independent specification of retinal ganglion cell identity
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2021 papers
Abstract
Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) relay visual information from the eye to the brain. RGCs are the first cell type generated during retinal neurogenesis. Loss of function of the transcription factor Atoh7, expressed in multipotent early neurogenic retinal progenitors leads to a selective and essentially complete loss of RGCs. Therefore, Atoh7 is considered essential for conferring competence on progenitors to generate RGCs. Despite the importance of Atoh7 in RGC specification, we find that inhibiting apoptosis in Atoh7-deficient mice by loss of function of Bax only modestly reduces RGC numbers. Single-cell RNA sequencing of Atoh7;Bax-deficient retinas shows that RGC differentiation is delayed but that the gene expression profile of RGC precursors is grossly normal. Atoh7;Bax-deficient RGCs eventually mature, fire action potentials, and incorporate into retinal circuitry but exhibit severe axonal guidance defects. This study reveals an essential role for Atoh7 in RGC survival and demonstrates Atoh7-dependent and Atoh7-independent mechanisms for RGC specification.
Related Papers
- → The distribution and size of ganglion cells in the retina of the pigmented rabbit: A quantitative analysis(1979)142 cited
- → The sizes and distribution of ganglion cells in the retina of the owl monkey, aotus trivirgatus(1976)104 cited
- → Low oxygen consumption in the inner retina of the visual streak of the rabbit(2004)26 cited
- → Spatial Pattern and Temporal Evolution of Retinal Oxygenation Response in Oxygen-Induced Retinopathy(2003)22 cited
- → Patterns of cell proliferation in the developing retina of the clawed frog in relation to blood supply and position of the choroidal fissure(1979)25 cited