4.5 Article

Photoreceptor ablation following ATP induced injury triggers Muller glia driven regeneration in zebrafish

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL EYE RESEARCH
Volume 207, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.exer.2021.108569

Keywords

Retinal regeneration; Photoreceptors; Adenosine triphosphate; Muller glia

Categories

Funding

  1. State Government of Victoria
  2. Australian Federal Government
  3. Kaye Merlin Brutton bequest (University of Melbourne)
  4. Advancing Women's Research Success Grant Program (Monash University)

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Research on retinal regeneration has explored the potential of Muller glia cells in fish and mammals as a promising treatment for visual impairment caused by disease and injury. Using adenosine triphosphate has been shown to induce regeneration of Muller glia cells in mammals.
Retinal regeneration research offers hope to people affected by visual impairment due to disease and injury. Ongoing research has explored many avenues towards retinal regeneration, including those that utilizes implantation of devices, cells or targeted viral-mediated gene therapy. These results have so far been limited, as gene therapy only has applications for rare single-gene mutations and implantations are invasive and in the case of cell transplantation donor cells often fail to integrate with adult neurons. An alternative mode of retinal regeneration utilizes a stem cell population unique to vertebrate retina - Muller glia (MG). Endogenous MG can readily regenerate lost neurons spontaneously in zebrafish and to a very limited extent in mammalian retina. The use of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) has been shown to induce retinal degeneration and activation of the MG in mammals, but whether this is conserved to other vertebrate species including those with higher regenerative capacity remains unknown. In our study, we injected a single dose of ATP intravitreal in zebrafish to characterize the cell death and MG induced regeneration. We used TUNEL labelling on retinal sections to show that ATP caused localised death of photoreceptors and ganglion cells within 24 h. Histology of GFP-transgenic zebrafish and BrdU injected fish demonstrated that MG proliferation peaked at days 3 and 4 post-ATP injection. Using BrdU labelling and photoreceptor markers (Zpr1) we observed regeneration of lost rod photoreceptors at day 14. This study has been undertaken to allow for comparative studies between mammals and zebrafish that use the same specific induction method of injury, i.e. ATP induced injury to allow for direct comparison of across species to narrow down resulting differences that might reflect the differing regenerative capacity. The ultimate aim of this work is to recapitulate pro-neurogenesis Muller glia signaling in mammals to produce new neurons that integrate with the existing retinal circuit to restore vision.

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