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Publication : The retinal pigmented epithelium is required for development and maintenance of the mouse neural retina.

First Author  Raymond SM Year  1995
Journal  Curr Biol Volume  5
Issue  11 Pages  1286-95
PubMed ID  8574586 Mgi Jnum  J:146426
Mgi Id  MGI:3837548 Doi  10.1016/s0960-9822(95)00255-7
Citation  Raymond SM, et al. (1995) The retinal pigmented epithelium is required for development and maintenance of the mouse neural retina. Curr Biol 5(11):1286-95
abstractText  BACKGROUND: During development of the vertebrate eye, there is a series of reciprocal cellular interactions that determine the fate of the eye components. Although evidence from organ culture suggests that the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) organizes the laminar structure of the differentiated neural retina, no role has been identified for the RPE in early eye development, nor has the later function of RPE been demonstrated in vivo. RESULTS: To investigate the role of RPE cells in eye development, we generated transgenic mice that carry the attenuated diphtheria toxin-A gene; this transgene was driven by the promoter of the gene encoding the tyrosinase-related protein-1, which is specifically expressed in pigment cells. Depending on the expression level of the transgene, the retinal epithelium was ablated before or after its differentiation into a pigmented cell layer. We show that an early ablation (embryonic day E10-11) resulted in disorganization of the retinal layer, immediate arrest of eye growth and subsequent eye resorption. A later ablation (E11.5-12.5) allowed the eye to be maintained during embryogenesis, but the laminar structure of the retina became disrupted by the end of gestation, the vitreous failed to accumulate the adults were anophthalmic or severely microphthalmic. In some microphthalmic eyes, a number of RPE cells escaped ablation and formed patches of pigmented cells; the laminar structure of the retina was maintained immediately adjacent to such pigmented areas but disrupted elsewhere. In both cases--early or late ablation of the RPE--the retina appears to be the primary affected tissue. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that presence of the RPE is required for the normal development of the eye in vivo. Its presence early in development is necessary for the correct morphogenesis of the neural retina. After the neural retina has started to differentiate, the RPE is still necessary, either directly or indirectly, to maintain the organization of the retinal lamina.
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