PUBLICATION

Dynamic Polarization of Rab11a Modulates Crb2a Localization and Impacts Signaling to Regulate Retinal Neurogenesis

Authors
Clark, B.S., Miesfeld, J.B., Flinn, M.A., Collery, R.F., Link, B.A.
ID
ZDB-PUB-210227-6
Date
2021
Source
Frontiers in cell and developmental biology   8: 608112 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Clark, Brian, Collery, Ross, Link, Brian, Miesfeld, Joel B.
Keywords
Rab11, crumbs, endocytosis, interkinetic nuclear migration, neurogenesis, recycling endosome
Datasets
GEO:GSE154895
MeSH Terms
none
PubMed
33634099 Full text @ Front Cell Dev Biol
Abstract
Interkinetic nuclear migration (IKNM) is the process in which pseudostratified epithelial nuclei oscillate from the apical to basal surface and in phase with the mitotic cycle. In the zebrafish retina, neuroepithelial retinal progenitor cells (RPCs) increase Notch activity with apical movement of the nuclei, and the depth of nuclear migration correlates with the probability that the next cell division will be neurogenic. This study focuses on the mechanisms underlying the relationships between IKNM, cell signaling, and neurogenesis. In particular, we have explored the role IKNM has on endosome biology within RPCs. Through genetic manipulation and live imaging in zebrafish, we find that early (Rab5-positive) and recycling (Rab11a-positive) endosomes polarize in a dynamic fashion within RPCs and with reference to nuclear position. Functional analyses suggest that dynamic polarization of recycling endosomes and their activity within the neuroepithelia modulates the subcellular localization of Crb2a, consequently affecting multiple signaling pathways that impact neurogenesis including Notch, Hippo, and Wnt activities. As nuclear migration is heterogenous and asynchronous among RPCs, Rab11a-affected signaling within the neuroepithelia is modulated in a differential manner, providing mechanistic insight to the correlation of IKNM and selection of RPCs to undergo neurogenesis.
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