Loss of LMO4 in the Retina Leads to Reduction of GABAergic Amacrine Cells and Functional Deficits

LMO4 is a transcription cofactor expressed during retinal development and in amacrine neurons at birth. A previous study in zebrafish reported that morpholino RNA ablation of one of two related genes, LMO4b, increases the size of the eye in embryos. However, the significance of LMO4 in mammalian ey...

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Main Author: Duquette, Philippe Mé
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20055
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.#10393-200552014-06-14T03:49:22ZLoss of LMO4 in the Retina Leads to Reduction of GABAergic Amacrine Cells and Functional DeficitsDuquette, Philippe MéLMO4retinadevelopmentBhlhb5LMO4 is a transcription cofactor expressed during retinal development and in amacrine neurons at birth. A previous study in zebrafish reported that morpholino RNA ablation of one of two related genes, LMO4b, increases the size of the eye in embryos. However, the significance of LMO4 in mammalian eye development and function remained unknown since LMO4 null mice die prior to birth. We observed the presence of a smaller eye and/or coloboma in ~40% of LMO4 null mouse embryos. To investigate the postnatal role of LMO4 in retinal development and function, LMO4 was conditionally ablated in retinal progenitor cells using the Pax6 alpha-enhancer Cre/LMO4flox mice. We found that these mice have fewer Bhlhb5-positive GABAergic amacrine and OFF-cone bipolar cells. The deficit appears to affect the postnatal wave of Bhlhb5+ neurons, suggesting a temporal requirement for LMO4 in retinal neuron development. In contrast, cholinergic and dopaminergic amacrine, rod bipolar and photoreceptor cell numbers were not affected. The selective reduction in these interneurons was accompanied by a functional deficit revealed by electroretinography, with reduced amplitude of b-waves, indicating deficits in the inner nuclear layer of the retina. Thus, LMO4 is necessary for normal GABAergic amacrine and OFF-cone bipolar cell development during retina development.2011-06-10T13:17:52Z2011-06-10T13:17:52Z20112011-06-10Thèse / Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10393/20055en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic LMO4
retina
development
Bhlhb5
spellingShingle LMO4
retina
development
Bhlhb5
Duquette, Philippe Mé
Loss of LMO4 in the Retina Leads to Reduction of GABAergic Amacrine Cells and Functional Deficits
description LMO4 is a transcription cofactor expressed during retinal development and in amacrine neurons at birth. A previous study in zebrafish reported that morpholino RNA ablation of one of two related genes, LMO4b, increases the size of the eye in embryos. However, the significance of LMO4 in mammalian eye development and function remained unknown since LMO4 null mice die prior to birth. We observed the presence of a smaller eye and/or coloboma in ~40% of LMO4 null mouse embryos. To investigate the postnatal role of LMO4 in retinal development and function, LMO4 was conditionally ablated in retinal progenitor cells using the Pax6 alpha-enhancer Cre/LMO4flox mice. We found that these mice have fewer Bhlhb5-positive GABAergic amacrine and OFF-cone bipolar cells. The deficit appears to affect the postnatal wave of Bhlhb5+ neurons, suggesting a temporal requirement for LMO4 in retinal neuron development. In contrast, cholinergic and dopaminergic amacrine, rod bipolar and photoreceptor cell numbers were not affected. The selective reduction in these interneurons was accompanied by a functional deficit revealed by electroretinography, with reduced amplitude of b-waves, indicating deficits in the inner nuclear layer of the retina. Thus, LMO4 is necessary for normal GABAergic amacrine and OFF-cone bipolar cell development during retina development.
author Duquette, Philippe Mé
author_facet Duquette, Philippe Mé
author_sort Duquette, Philippe Mé
title Loss of LMO4 in the Retina Leads to Reduction of GABAergic Amacrine Cells and Functional Deficits
title_short Loss of LMO4 in the Retina Leads to Reduction of GABAergic Amacrine Cells and Functional Deficits
title_full Loss of LMO4 in the Retina Leads to Reduction of GABAergic Amacrine Cells and Functional Deficits
title_fullStr Loss of LMO4 in the Retina Leads to Reduction of GABAergic Amacrine Cells and Functional Deficits
title_full_unstemmed Loss of LMO4 in the Retina Leads to Reduction of GABAergic Amacrine Cells and Functional Deficits
title_sort loss of lmo4 in the retina leads to reduction of gabaergic amacrine cells and functional deficits
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20055
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