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Retinal development anomalies and cone photoreceptors degeneration upon Bmi1 deficiency
Author(s) -
A Barabino,
Vicky Plamondon,
Mohamed Abdouh,
Wassim Chatoo,
Anthony Flamier,
Roy Hanna,
Shufeng Zhou,
Noboru Motoyama,
Marc Hébert,
Joëlle Lavoie,
Gilbert Bernier
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.15
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1477-9129
pISSN - 0950-1991
DOI - 10.1242/dev.125351
Subject(s) - biology , bmi1 , retinal , retinal degeneration , retina , microbiology and biotechnology , embryonic stem cell , heterochromatin , visual phototransduction , stem cell , genetics , neuroscience , biochemistry , chromatin , dna , gene
Retinal development occurs through the sequential but overlapping generation of six types of neuronal cells and one glial cell type. Of these, rod and cone photoreceptors represent the functional unit of light detection and phototransduction and are frequently affected in retinal degenerative diseases. During mouse development, the Polycomb group protein Bmi1 is expressed in immature retinal progenitors and differentiated retinal neurons, including cones. We show here that Bmi1 is required to prevent post natal degeneration of cone photoreceptors and bipolar neurons and that inactivation of Chk2 or p53 could improve but not overcome cone degeneration in Bmi1(-/-) mice. The retinal phenotype of Bmi1(-/-) mice was also characterized by loss of heterochromatin, activation of tandem repeats, oxidative stress and Rip3-associated necroptosis. In the human retina, BMI1 was preferentially expressed in cones at heterochromatic foci. BMI1 inactivation in human embryonic stem cells was compatible with retinal induction but impaired cone terminal differentiation. Despite this developmental arrest, BMI1-deficient cones recapitulated several anomalies observed in Bmi1(-/-) photoreceptors, such as loss of heterochromatin, activation of tandem repeats and induction of p53, revealing partly conserved biological functions between mouse and man.

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