Epithelia-mesenchyme interaction plays an essential role in trans differentiation of retinal pigment epithelium of silver mutant quail:: Localization of FGF and related molecules and aberrant migration pattern of neural crest cells during eye rudiment formation

被引:22
作者
Araki, M [1 ]
Takano, T
Uemonsa, T
Nakane, Y
Tsudzuki, M
Kaneko, T
机构
[1] Nara Womens Univ, Dept Sci Biol, Dev Neurobiol Lab, Nara 6308506, Japan
[2] Osaka Univ, Coll Agr, Osaka 5998531, Japan
[3] Hiroshima Univ, Fac Appl Biol Sci, Lab Anim Genet, Hiroshima 7398528, Japan
[4] Univ Shizuoka, Jr Coll, Shizuoka 4228021, Japan
关键词
retina; retinal pigment epithelium; neural crest cell; laminin; heparan sulfate; fibroblast growth factors; chimera embryo; transdifferentiation; silver mutation; Mitf;
D O I
10.1006/dbio.2002.0591
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Homozygotes of the quail silver mutation, which have plumage color changes, also display a unique phenotype in the eye: during early embryonic development, the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) spontaneously transdifferentiates into neural retinal tissue. Mitf is considered to be the responsible gene and to function similarly to the mouse microphthalmia mutation, and tissue interaction between RPE and surrounding mesenchymal tissue in organ culture has been shown to be essential for the initiation of the trans differentiation process in which fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling is involved. The immunohistochemical results of the present study show that laminin and heparan sulfate proteoglycan, both acting as cofactors for FGF binding, are localized in the area of trans differentiation of silver embryos much more abundantly than in wild-type embryos. More intense immunohistochemical staining with FGF-1 antibody, but not with FGF-2 antibody, is also found in the neural retina, RPE, and choroidal tissue of silver embryos than in wild-type embryos. HNK-1 immunohistochemistry revealed that clusters of HNK-1-positive cells (presumptive migrating neural crest cells) are frequently located around the developing eyes and in the posterior region of the silver embryonic eye. Finally, chick-quail chimerical eyes were made by grafting silver quail optic vesicles to chicken host embryos: in most cases, no transdifferentiation occurs in the silver RPE, but in a few cases, trans differentiation occurs where silver quail cells predominate in the choroid tissue. These observations together with our previous in vitro study indicate that the silver mutation affects not only RPE cells but also cephalic neural crest cells, which migrate to the eye rudiment, and that these crest cells play an essential role in the transdifferentiation of RPE, possibly by modifying the FGF signaling pathway. The precise molecular mechanism involved in RPE-neural crest cell interaction is still unknown, and the quail silver mutation is considered to be a good experimental model for studying the role of neural crest cells in vertebrate eye development. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA).
引用
收藏
页码:358 / 371
页数:14
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