Asymmetric neurogenic commitment of retinal progenitors is regulated via the Notch endocytic pathway

Author:

Nerli ElisaORCID,Rocha-Martins MauricioORCID,Norden CarenORCID

Abstract

AbstractDuring brain development, progenitor cells need to balance proliferation and differentiation in order to generate different neurons in the correct numbers and proportions. Currently, the patterns of multipotent progenitors’ division that lead to neurogenic entry and the factors that regulate them are not fully understood. We here use the zebrafish retina to address this gap, exploiting the possibilities for quantitative live-imaging. We show that early neurogenic progenitors arise from asymmetric divisions. Notch regulates this asymmetry as when inhibited, symmetric divisions producing two neurogenic progenitors occur. Surprisingly, Notch does not act through an apicobasal activity gradient as previously suggested but through asymmetric inheritance of Sara-positive endosomes. Further, the resulting neurogenic progenitors show cell biological features different from multipotent progenitors, raising the possibility that an intermediate state of progenitors exists in the retina. Our study thus opens new insights into the regulation of proliferative and differentiative events during central nervous system development.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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