You are here

Cross-species transcriptomic and epigenomic analysis reveals key regulators of injury response and neuronal regeneration in vertebrate retinas

Authors: 
Hoang T, Wang J, Boyd P, Wang F, Santiago C, Jiang L, Lahne M, Todd L, Saez C, Yoo S, Keuthan C, Palazzo I, Squires N, Campbell W, Jia M, Rajaii F, Parayil T, Wang G, Ash J, Fischer A, Hyde D, Qian J, Blackshaw S
Citation: 
bioRxiv. 2019:[preprint] doi:10.1101/717876
Abstract: 
Injury induces retinal Muller glia of cold-blooded, but not mammalian, vertebrates to generate neurons. To identify gene regulatory networks that control neurogenic competence in retinal glia, we comprehensively profiled injury-dependent changes in gene expression and chromatin conformation in Muller glia from zebrafish, chick and mice using bulk RNA and ATAC-Seq, as well as single-cell RNA-Seq. Integration of these data, together with functional analysis of candidate genes, identified evolutionarily conserved and species-specific gene networks controlling glial quiescence, gliosis, and neurogenic competence. In zebrafish and chick, transition from quiescence to gliosis is a critical stage in acquisition of neurogenic competence, while in mice a dedicated network suppresses this transition and rapidly restores quiescence. Selective disruption of NFI family transcription factors in mice, which maintain and restore quiescence, confers injury-dependent proliferative and neurogenic competence on Muller glia. These findings may help guide the design of cell-based therapies aimed at restoring retinal neurons lost in disease.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
zebrafish
Delivery Method: 
intravitreal injection then electroporation