Common and divergent gene regulatory networks control injury-induced and developmental neurogenesis in zebrafish retina.
Pin LyuMaria IribarneDmitri SerjanovYijie ZhaiThanh HoangLeah J CampbellPatrick BoydIsabella PalazzoMikiko NagashimaNicholas J SilvaPeter F HitchcockJiang QianDavid R HydeSeth BlackshawPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Following acute retinal damage, zebrafish possess the ability to regenerate all neuronal subtypes through Müller glia (MG) reprogramming and asymmetric cell division that produces a multipotent Müller glia-derived neuronal progenitor cell (MGPC). This raises three key questions. First, do MG reprogram to a developmental retinal progenitor cell (RPC) state? Second, to what extent does regeneration recapitulate retinal development? And finally, does loss of different retinal cell subtypes induce unique MG regeneration responses? We examined these questions by performing single-nuclear and single-cell RNA-Seq and ATAC-Seq in both developing and regenerating retinas. Here we show that injury induces MG to reprogram to a state similar to late-stage RPCs. However, there are major transcriptional differences between MGPCs and RPCs, as well as major transcriptional differences between activated MG and MGPCs when different retinal cell subtypes are damaged. Validation of candidate genes confirmed that loss of different subtypes induces differences in transcription factor gene expression and regeneration outcomes.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- rna seq
- diabetic retinopathy
- optical coherence tomography
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- optic nerve
- stem cells
- high throughput
- cell therapy
- type diabetes
- oxidative stress
- genome wide
- intensive care unit
- dna binding
- diabetic rats
- heat shock
- blood brain barrier
- respiratory failure
- wound healing
- insulin resistance
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- hepatitis b virus
- heat shock protein
- stress induced