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Conditional gene expression and lineage tracing of tuba1a expressing cells during zebrafish development and retina regeneration
Authors
Abercrombie
Adolf
+58 more
Babb
Becker
Becker
Berdiev
Bernardos
Boniface
Braisted
Branda
Byrd
Cameron
Chang
Collins
Danielian
Devoto
Ekstrom
Faillace
Fashena
Fausett
Fausett
Feil
Feil
Feng
Fimbel
Fischer
Godinho
Goldman
Grandel
Gulati-Leekha
Hans
Heiber
Higashijima
Hitchcock
Indra
Kainz
Karl
Kassen
Kassen
Korchak
Larison
Le
Liu
Matsuda
Nevin
Ober
Ooto
Pellegrini
Raymond
Raymond
Senut
Sherpa
Thummel
Urasaki
Vihtelic
Vitorino
Wang
Williams
Wu
Yazulla
Publication date
15 October 2010
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
The tuba1a gene encodes a neural-specific Α-tubulin isoform whose expression is restricted to the developing and regenerating nervous system. By using zebrafish as a model system for studying CNS regeneration, we recently showed that retinal injury induces tuba1a gene expression in MÜller glia that reentered the cell cycle. However, because of the transient nature of tuba1a gene expression during development and regeneration, it was not possible to trace the lineage of the tuba1a -expressing cells with a reporter directly under the control of the tuba1a promoter. To overcome this limitation, we generated tuba1a:CreER T2 and Β- actin2:loxP-mCherrry-loxP-GFP double transgenic fish that allowed us to label tuba1a -expressing cells conditionally and permanently via ligand-induced recombination. During development, recombination revealed transient tuba1a expression in not only neural progenitors but also cells that contribute to skeletal muscle, heart, and intestine. In the adult, recombination revealed tuba1a expression in brain, olfactory neurons, and sensory cells of the lateral line, but not in the retina. After retinal injury, recombination showed tuba1a expression in MÜller glia that had reentered the cell cycle, and lineage tracing indicated that these cells are responsible for regenerating retinal neurons and glia. These results suggest that tuba1a -expressing progenitors contribute to multiple cell lineages during development and that tuba1a -expressing MÜller glia are retinal progenitors in the adult. J. Comp. Neurol. 518:4196–4212, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/77972/1/22448_ftp.pd
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