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Pax6 organizes the anterior eye segment by guiding two distinct neural crest waves

Masanari Takamiya, Johannes Stegmaier, Andrei Yu Kobitski, Benjamin Schott, Benjamin D. Weger, Dimitra Margariti, Angel R. Cereceda Delgado, Victor Gourain, Tim Scherr, Lixin Yang, Sebastian Sorge, Jens C. Otte, Volker Hartmann, Jos van Wezel, Rainer Stotzka, Thomas Reinhard, Günther Schlunck, Thomas Dickmeis, Sepand Rastegar, Ralf Mikut, G. Ulrich Nienhaus, Uwe Strähle

2020PLoS Genetics41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cranial neural crest (NC) contributes to the developing vertebrate eye. By multidimensional, quantitative imaging, we traced the origin of the ocular NC cells to two distinct NC populations that differ in the maintenance of sox10 expression, Wnt signalling, origin, route, mode and destination of migration. The first NC population migrates to the proximal and the second NC cell group populates the distal (anterior) part of the eye. By analysing zebrafish pax6a/b compound mutants presenting anterior segment dysgenesis, we demonstrate that Pax6a/b guide the two NC populations to distinct proximodistal locations. We further provide evidence that the lens whose formation is pax6a/b-dependent and lens-derived TGFβ signals contribute to the building of the anterior segment. Taken together, our results reveal multiple roles of Pax6a/b in the control of NC cells during development of the anterior segment.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyNeural crestPAX6ZebrafishDysgenesisAnatomySOX10EctodermPopulationEye developmentLens (geology)Neural plateCranial neural crestWnt signaling pathwayNeuroscienceCell biologyGeneticsPhenotypeEmbryoSignal transductionEmbryogenesisGeneDemographyPaleontologyTranscription factorSociologyMicroRNA in disease regulationConnexins and lens biologyDevelopmental Biology and Gene Regulation