Litcius/Paper detail

Tgfb3 collaborates with PP2A and notch signaling pathways to inhibit retina regeneration

Mi‐Sun Lee, Jin Wan, Daniel Goldman

2020eLife55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Neuronal degeneration in the zebrafish retina stimulates Müller glia (MG) to proliferate and generate multipotent progenitors for retinal repair. Controlling this proliferation is critical to successful regeneration. Previous studies reported that retinal injury stimulates pSmad3 signaling in injury-responsive MG. Contrary to these findings, we report pSmad3 expression is restricted to quiescent MG and suppressed in injury-responsive MG. Our data indicates that Tgfb3 is the ligand responsible for regulating pSmad3 expression. Remarkably, although overexpression of either Tgfb1b or Tgfb3 can stimulate pSmad3 expression in the injured retina, only Tgfb3 inhibits injury-dependent MG proliferation; suggesting the involvement of a non-canonical Tgfb signaling pathway. Furthermore, inhibition of Alk5, PP2A or Notch signaling rescues MG proliferation in Tgfb3 overexpressing zebrafish. Finally, we report that this Tgfb3 signaling pathway is active in zebrafish MG, but not those in mice, which may contribute to the different regenerative capabilities of MG from fish and mammals.

Topics & Concepts

ZebrafishMuller gliaCell biologyRetinal regenerationRetinaRegeneration (biology)Notch signaling pathwaySignal transductionBiologyProgenitor cellNeuroscienceStem cellBiochemistryGeneDevelopmental Biology and Gene RegulationRetinal Development and DisordersRenal and related cancers