PURPOSE. Retinoic acid (RA) has a critical role during development of the retina. We investigated RA effects on photoreceptor apoptosis and differentiation, and the intracellular pathways involved.METHODS. Rat retinal neuronal cultures were supplemented with RA with or without docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), a photoreceptor survival factor, and photoreceptor apoptosis and differentiation were evaluated at different times of development. To investigate the intracellular pathways activated by RA, the levels of phosphorylated (P) ERK and P-p38 in cultures with or without RA, and the effect of pretreatment with SB203580, a p38 specific inhibitor, on apoptosis and differentiation were evaluated.RESULTS. RA addition at day 0, when cells still were proliferating, selectively increased apoptosis in photoreceptors, whereas addition at day 2 no longer caused cell death. RA stimulated opsin and peripherin expression, and neurite outgrowth regardless of the time of development. Addition of RA at day 0, but not at day 2, rapidly increased P-p38 levels, but did not affect P-ERK levels. p38 inhibition completely prevented RA-induced apoptosis, and partially decreased differentiation. DHA prevented apoptosis and additively increased differentiation, without affecting RA activation of p38.
CONCLUSIONS.Our results show that RA activation of the p38 intracellular pathway was essential for its early induction of apoptosis and partially responsible for promoting differentiation. DHA prevention of this apoptosis suggests that RA effects during early development must be counterbalanced by survival factors to prevent photoreceptor death, in an interplay that might help to establish the final number of photoreceptors.
Using stem cells to replace lost neurons is a promising strategy for treating retinal neurodegenerative diseases. Among their multiple functions, Müller glial cells are retina stem cells, with a robust regenerative potential in lower vertebrates, which is much more restricted in mammals. In rodents, most retina progenitors exit the cell cycle immediately after birth, differentiate as neurons, and then cannot reenter the cell cycle. Here we demonstrate that, in mixed cultures with Müller glial cells, rat retina progenitor cells expressed stem cell properties, maintained their proliferative potential, and were able to preserve these properties and remain mitotically active after several consecutive passages. Notably, these progenitors retained the capacity to differentiate as photoreceptors, even after successive reseedings. Müller glial cells markedly stimulated differentiation of retina progenitors; these cells initially expressed Crx and then developed as mature photoreceptors that expressed characteristic markers, such as opsin and peripherin. Moreover, they were light responsive, insofar as they decreased their cGMP levels when exposed to light, and they also showed high-affinity glutamate uptake, a characteristic of mature photoreceptors. Our present findings indicate that, in addition to giving rise to new photoreceptors, Müller glial cells might instruct a pool of undifferentiated cells to develop and preserve stem cell characteristics, even after successive reseedings, and then stimulate their differentiation as functional photoreceptors. This complementary mechanism might contribute to enlarge the limited regenerative capacity of mammalian Müller cells.
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