Stem Cell Research (Dec 2018)

Induction of rod versus cone photoreceptor-specific progenitors from retinal precursor cells

  • Saeed Khalili,
  • Brian G. Ballios,
  • Justin Belair-Hickey,
  • Laura Donaldson,
  • Jeff Liu,
  • Brenda L.K. Coles,
  • Kenneth N. Grisé,
  • Tahani Baakdhah,
  • Gary D. Bader,
  • Valerie A. Wallace,
  • Gilbert Bernier,
  • Molly S. Shoichet,
  • Derek van der Kooy

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33
pp. 215 – 227

Abstract

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During development, multipotent progenitors undergo temporally-restricted differentiation into post-mitotic retinal cells; however, the mechanisms of progenitor division that occurs during retinogenesis remain controversial. Using clonal analyses (lineage tracing and single cell cultures), we identify rod versus cone lineage-specific progenitors derived from both adult retinal stem cells and embryonic neural retinal precursors. Taurine and retinoic acid are shown to act in an instructive and lineage-restricted manner early in the progenitor lineage hierarchy to produce rod-restricted progenitors from stem cell progeny. We also identify an instructive, but lineage-independent, mechanism for the specification of cone-restricted progenitors through the suppression of multiple differentiation signaling pathways. These data indicate that exogenous signals play critical roles in directing lineage decisions and resulting in fate-restricted rod or cone photoreceptor progenitors in culture. Additional factors may be involved in governing photoreceptor fates in vivo. Keywords: Stem cell, Retina, Rod photoreceptor, Cone photoreceptor, Progenitors