Direct non-cell autonomous Pax6 activity regulates eye development in the zebrafish

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Modifications in <it>Pax6 </it>homeogene expression produce strong eye phenotypes. This suggested to us that eye development might be an appropriate model to verify if homeoprotein intercellular passage has important func...

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Main Authors: Prochiantz Alain, Joliot Alain, Lesaffre Brigitte, Volovitch Michel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2007-01-01
Series:Neural Development
Online Access:http://www.neuraldevelopment.com/content/2/1/2
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spelling doaj-840731270a214b5f8db3f8bc3222ecec2020-11-24T23:40:56ZengBMCNeural Development1749-81042007-01-0121210.1186/1749-8104-2-2Direct non-cell autonomous Pax6 activity regulates eye development in the zebrafishProchiantz AlainJoliot AlainLesaffre BrigitteVolovitch Michel<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Modifications in <it>Pax6 </it>homeogene expression produce strong eye phenotypes. This suggested to us that eye development might be an appropriate model to verify if homeoprotein intercellular passage has important functions in early development. Similar to other homeoproteins, Pax6 has two domains that enable secretion and internalization by live cells and, thus, intercellular passage. In principle, a straightforward way to test the hypothesis would be to mutate one of the two sequences to produce a 'cell autonomous only' Pax6. However, this was not possible because these sequences are in the homeodomain and their modification would affect Pax6 transcriptional properties. We have thus developed an approach aimed at blocking Pax6 only in the extracellular milieu of developing zebrafish embryos.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A first strategy was to inject a one-cell embryo with a mRNA encoding a secreted single-chain anti-Pax6 antibody. A second, complementary, strategy was to inject a Pax6 antibody in the blastula extracellular milieu. In both cases, 'dissymmetric eyes', 'one eye only' and 'no eye' phenotypes were produced. In most cases, lens phenotypes paralleled retina malformations. Although eye phenotypes were analyzed 30 hours post-fertilization, there was a strong correlation between early eye field asymmetry, early asymmetry in <it>Pax6 </it>expression and later-occurring eye malformations. Several controls were introduced, demonstrating that the effect is specific to Pax6 and cannot be explained by intracellular antibody activities.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This study supports the hypothesis that the Pax6 transcription factor is also a signaling molecule with direct non-cell autonomous activity.</p> http://www.neuraldevelopment.com/content/2/1/2
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Prochiantz Alain
Joliot Alain
Lesaffre Brigitte
Volovitch Michel
spellingShingle Prochiantz Alain
Joliot Alain
Lesaffre Brigitte
Volovitch Michel
Direct non-cell autonomous Pax6 activity regulates eye development in the zebrafish
Neural Development
author_facet Prochiantz Alain
Joliot Alain
Lesaffre Brigitte
Volovitch Michel
author_sort Prochiantz Alain
title Direct non-cell autonomous Pax6 activity regulates eye development in the zebrafish
title_short Direct non-cell autonomous Pax6 activity regulates eye development in the zebrafish
title_full Direct non-cell autonomous Pax6 activity regulates eye development in the zebrafish
title_fullStr Direct non-cell autonomous Pax6 activity regulates eye development in the zebrafish
title_full_unstemmed Direct non-cell autonomous Pax6 activity regulates eye development in the zebrafish
title_sort direct non-cell autonomous pax6 activity regulates eye development in the zebrafish
publisher BMC
series Neural Development
issn 1749-8104
publishDate 2007-01-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Modifications in <it>Pax6 </it>homeogene expression produce strong eye phenotypes. This suggested to us that eye development might be an appropriate model to verify if homeoprotein intercellular passage has important functions in early development. Similar to other homeoproteins, Pax6 has two domains that enable secretion and internalization by live cells and, thus, intercellular passage. In principle, a straightforward way to test the hypothesis would be to mutate one of the two sequences to produce a 'cell autonomous only' Pax6. However, this was not possible because these sequences are in the homeodomain and their modification would affect Pax6 transcriptional properties. We have thus developed an approach aimed at blocking Pax6 only in the extracellular milieu of developing zebrafish embryos.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A first strategy was to inject a one-cell embryo with a mRNA encoding a secreted single-chain anti-Pax6 antibody. A second, complementary, strategy was to inject a Pax6 antibody in the blastula extracellular milieu. In both cases, 'dissymmetric eyes', 'one eye only' and 'no eye' phenotypes were produced. In most cases, lens phenotypes paralleled retina malformations. Although eye phenotypes were analyzed 30 hours post-fertilization, there was a strong correlation between early eye field asymmetry, early asymmetry in <it>Pax6 </it>expression and later-occurring eye malformations. Several controls were introduced, demonstrating that the effect is specific to Pax6 and cannot be explained by intracellular antibody activities.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This study supports the hypothesis that the Pax6 transcription factor is also a signaling molecule with direct non-cell autonomous activity.</p>
url http://www.neuraldevelopment.com/content/2/1/2
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AT joliotalain directnoncellautonomouspax6activityregulateseyedevelopmentinthezebrafish
AT lesaffrebrigitte directnoncellautonomouspax6activityregulateseyedevelopmentinthezebrafish
AT volovitchmichel directnoncellautonomouspax6activityregulateseyedevelopmentinthezebrafish
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