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Biasing amacrine subtypes in the Atoh7 lineage through expression of Barhl2

Authors: 
Jusuf PR, Albadri S, Paolini A, Currie PD, Argenton F, Higashijima S, Harris WA, Poggi L
Citation: 
J Neurosci. 2012 Oct 3;32(40):13929-44. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2073-12.2012
Abstract: 
Within the developing vertebrate retina, particular subtypes of amacrine cells (ACs) tend to arise from progenitors expressing the bHLH transcription factor, Atoh7, which is necessary for the early generation of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). All ACs require the post-mitotic expression of the bHLH transcription factor Ptf1a, however Ptf1a alone is not sufficient to give subtype identities. Here we use functional and in vivo time-lapse studies in the zebrafish retina to investigate on the developmental programs leading to ACs specification within the subsequent divisions of Atoh7-positive progenitors. We find evidences that the homeobox transcription factor Barhl2 is an AC subtype identity-biasing factor that turns on within Atoh7-positive descendants. In vivo lineage tracing reveals that particular modes of cell division tend to generate Barhl2-positive precursors from sisters of RGCs. Additionally, Atoh7 indirectly impacts these division modes to regulate the right number of barhl2-expressing cells. We finally find that Atoh7 itself influences the subtypes of Barhl2-dependent ACs. Taken together, our study uncovers lineage-related and molecular logic of subtype specification in the vertebrate retina, by showing that specific AC subtypes arise via a particular mode of cell division and a transcriptional network cascade involving the sequential expression of first atoh7 followed by ptf1a and then barhl2.
Organism or Cell Type: 
zebrafish
Delivery Method: 
Microinjection