info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Purinergic signals regulate daily s-phase cell activity in the ciliary marginal zone of the zebrafish retina
Fecha
2011-04Registro en:
Ricatti, Maria Jimena; Battista, Ariadna Gabriela; Zorrilla Zubilete, María Aurelia; Faillace, Maria Paula; Purinergic signals regulate daily s-phase cell activity in the ciliary marginal zone of the zebrafish retina; SAGE Publications; Journal of Biological Rhythms; 26; 2; 4-2011; 107-117
0748-7304
1552-4531
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Ricatti, Maria Jimena
Battista, Ariadna Gabriela
Zorrilla Zubilete, María Aurelia
Faillace, Maria Paula
Resumen
Regeneration and growth that occur in the adult teleost retina have been helpful in identifying molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying cell proliferation and differentiation. Here, it is reported that S-phase cell number, in the ciliary marginal zone (CMZ) of the adult zebrafish retina, exhibits day-night variations with a mid-light phase peak. Oscillations persist for 24 h in constant darkness (DD), suggesting control by a circadian component. However, variations in the S-phase nuclei number were rapidly dampened and not present during and after a second day in DD. An ADPβS treatment significantly enhanced S-phase activity at night to mid-light levels, as assessed by in vivo BrdU incorporation in a 2-h interval. Moreover, daylight increase in S-phase cell number was completely abolished when extracellular nucleotide levels or their extracellular hydrolysis by ectonucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolases (NTPDases) were significantly disrupted or when a selective antagonist of purinergic P2Y1 receptors was intraocularly injected before BrdU exposure. Extracellular nucleotides and NTPDase action were also important for maintaining nocturnal low levels of S-phase activity in the CMZ. Finally, we showed that mRNAs of NTPDases 1, 2 (3 isoforms), and 3 as well as of P2Y1 receptor are present in the neural retina of zebrafish. NTPDase mRNA expression exhibited a 2-fold increment in light versus dark conditions as assessed by quantitative RT-PCR, whereas P2Y1 receptor mRNA levels did not show significant day-night variations. This study demonstrates a key role for nucleotides, principally ADP as a paracrine signal, as well as for NTPDases, the plasma membrane—bound enzymes that control extracellular nucleotide concentration, for inducing S-phase cell entry in the CMZ—normally associated with retinal growth—throughout the light-dark cycle.