4.4 Article

A cell polarity protein aPKCλ is required for eye lens formation and growth

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 336, Issue 2, Pages 246-256

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2009.10.010

Keywords

Lens; aPKC; Polarity; Cell junction; Proliferation

Funding

  1. Travelling Research Fellowship of Wellcome Trust, UK
  2. Foreign Research Fellowship of Naito Foundation, Japan

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The organisation of individual cells into a functional three-dimensional tissue is still a major question in developmental biology. Modulation of epithelia] cell shape is a critical driving force in forming tissues. This is well illustrated in the eye lens where epithelial cells elongate extensively during their differentiation into fibre cells. It is at the lens equator that epithelia[ cells elongate along their apical-basal axis. During this process the elongating epithelial cells and their earliest fibre cell derivatives remain anchored at their apical tips, forming a discrete region or modiolus, which we term the lens fulcrum. How this is achieved has received scant attention and is little understood. Here, we show that conditional depletion of aPKC lambda, a central effector of the PAR polarity complex, disrupts the apical junctions in elongating epithelial cells so that the lens fulcrum fails to form. This results in disorganised fibre cell alignment that then causes cataract. Interestingly, aPKC lambda depletion also promotes epithelial-mesenchymal transition of the lens epithelial cells, reducing their proliferation, leading ultimately to a small lens and microphthalmia. These observations indicate that aPKC lambda, a regulator of polarity and apical junctions, is required for development of a lens that is the correct size and shape. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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