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      Loss of LMO4 in the Retina Leads to Reduction of GABAergic Amacrine Cells and Functional Deficits

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          Abstract

          Background

          LMO4 is a transcription cofactor expressed during retinal development and in amacrine neurons at birth. A previous study in zebrafish reported that morpholino RNA ablation of one of two related genes, LMO4b, increases the size of eyes in embryos. However, the significance of LMO4 in mammalian eye development and function remained unknown since LMO4 null mice die prior to birth.

          Methodology/Principal Findings

          We observed the presence of a smaller eye and/or coloboma in ∼40% LMO4 null mouse embryos. To investigate the postnatal role of LMO4 in retinal development and function, LMO4 was conditionally ablated in retinal progenitor cells using the Pax6 alpha-enhancer Cre/LMO4flox mice. We found that these mice have fewer Bhlhb5-positive GABAergic amacrine and OFF-cone bipolar cells. The deficit appears to affect the postnatal wave of Bhlhb5+ neurons, suggesting a temporal requirement for LMO4 in retinal neuron development. In contrast, cholinergic and dopaminergic amacrine, rod bipolar and photoreceptor cell numbers were not affected. The selective reduction in these interneurons was accompanied by a functional deficit revealed by electroretinography, with reduced amplitude of b-waves, indicating deficits in the inner nuclear layer of the retina.

          Conclusions/Significance

          Inhibitory GABAergic interneurons play a critical function in controlling retinal image processing, and are important for neural networks in the central nervous system. Our finding of an essential postnatal function of LMO4 in the differentiation of Bhlhb5-expressing inhibitory interneurons in the retina may be a general mechanism whereby LMO4 controls the production of inhibitory interneurons in the nervous system.

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          Most cited references38

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          Neuronal subtype-specific genes that control corticospinal motor neuron development in vivo.

          Within the vertebrate nervous system, the presence of many different lineages of neurons and glia complicates the molecular characterization of single neuronal populations. In order to elucidate molecular mechanisms underlying the specification and development of corticospinal motor neurons (CSMN), we purified CSMN at distinct stages of development in vivo and compared their gene expression to two other pure populations of cortical projection neurons: callosal projection neurons and corticotectal projection neurons. We found genes that are potentially instructive for CSMN development, as well as genes that are excluded from CSMN and are restricted to other populations of neurons, even within the same cortical layer. Loss-of-function experiments in null mutant mice for Ctip2 (also known as Bcl11b), one of the newly characterized genes, demonstrate that it plays a critical role in the development of CSMN axonal projections to the spinal cord in vivo, confirming that we identified central genetic determinants of the CSMN population.
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            Pax6 is required for the multipotent state of retinal progenitor cells.

            The molecular mechanisms mediating the retinogenic potential of multipotent retinal progenitor cells (RPCs) are poorly defined. Prior to initiating retinogenesis, RPCs express a limited set of transcription factors implicated in the evolutionary ancient genetic network that initiates eye development. We elucidated the function of one of these factors, Pax6, in the RPCs of the intact developing eye by conditional gene targeting. Upon Pax6 inactivation, the potential of RPCs becomes entirely restricted to only one of the cell fates normally available to RPCs, resulting in the exclusive generation of amacrine interneurons. Our findings demonstrate furthermore that Pax6 directly controls the transcriptional activation of retinogenic bHLH factors that bias subsets of RPCs toward the different retinal cell fates, thereby mediating the full retinogenic potential of RPCs.
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              Early asymmetry of gene transcription in embryonic human left and right cerebral cortex.

              The human left and right cerebral hemispheres are anatomically and functionally asymmetric. To test whether human cortical asymmetry has a molecular basis, we studied gene expression levels between the left and right embryonic hemispheres using serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE). We identified and verified 27 differentially expressed genes, which suggests that human cortical asymmetry is accompanied by early, marked transcriptional asymmetries. LMO4 is consistently more highly expressed in the right perisylvian human cerebral cortex than in the left and is essential for cortical development in mice, suggesting that human left-right specialization reflects asymmetric cortical development at early stages.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                PLoS One
                plos
                plosone
                PLoS ONE
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
                1932-6203
                2010
                7 October 2010
                : 5
                : 10
                : e13232
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Centre for Stroke Recovery, Neuroscience, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
                [2 ]Molecular Medicine Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
                [3 ]Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
                [4 ]Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
                [5 ]Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
                [6 ]University of Ottawa Eye Institute, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
                University of Dayton, United States of America
                Author notes

                Conceived and designed the experiments: PMD VW HHC. Performed the experiments: PMD XZ NLY EJM HHC. Analyzed the data: PMD JJL HHC. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: VW HHC. Wrote the paper: HHC.

                Article
                10-PONE-RA-21464R1
                10.1371/journal.pone.0013232
                2951357
                20949055
                b31dbd21-703c-4334-a000-ef6e19f9fb2d
                Duquette et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
                History
                : 1 July 2010
                : 14 September 2010
                Page count
                Pages: 10
                Categories
                Research Article
                Developmental Biology
                Neuroscience
                Developmental Biology/Neurodevelopment
                Neuroscience/Neurodevelopment
                Ophthalmology/Retinal Disorders

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                Uncategorized

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