Montreal University. Canada: A team of researchers at the IRCM led by Michel Cayouette, PhD,
identified one of the genes responsible for producing a type of cell
required for vision. The breakthrough, published in the scientific
journal Neuron, could eventually help overcome obstacles associated with treatments to prevent blindness.
The retina of the eye is made up, in part, of two types of
photoreceptors (light-sensing neurons): rods that enable night vision,
and cones that are used for high visual acuity and colour daylight
vision. The loss of cones is a major cause of blindness associated to
various retinal degenerative diseases, and the scientific community is
working towards restoring sight through cell replacement therapies.
“Retinal stem cells produce all types of retinal cells, including rod and cone photoreceptors,” explains Pierre Mattar,
PhD, first author of the study and postdoctoral fellow in Dr.
Cayouette's laboratory. “The scientific community has been successful in
generating rods from stem cells and has even used them to restore sight
in mouse models of blindness, which shows that this approach is
promising. However, the production of a large number of cones continues
to be very difficult, for reasons that remain unknown.”
During normal development of the retina, stem cells produce the
different types of photoreceptors according to a precise time sequence.
They produce cones first and, later, will produce rods. The IRCM
researchers identified, for the first time, one of the genes involved in
this temporal change, the Casz1 gene.
“We discovered a cascade of genes that allows the sequential
production of photoreceptors and other retinal cell types over time,”
says Dr. Cayouette, Associate IRCM Research Professor and Director of
the Cellular Neurobiology research unit. “This cascade appears to be
conserved from flies to mice, which suggests that it might represent a
fundamental mechanism to control stem cell development that could also
be conserved in humans.”
“The current methods to produce photoreceptors from retinal stem
cells do not take into account the temporal identity of stem cells or,
in other words, when they are most likely to generate cones or rods,”
adds Dr. Cayouette. “Our findings now provide a novel way to control
this process. Manipulating the Casz1 cascade could allow us, for
example, to extend the cone-producing window, thereby increasing the
generation of cone cells that could be used in treatments to reverse
blindness.”
The article published in Neuron was prepared in
collaboration with Johan Ericson from the Karolinska Institutet in
Sweden and Seth Blackshaw from John Hopkins University School of
Medicine in the United States. In the same issue of the journal, a
preview manuscript by Claude Desplan and colleagues (Konstantinides et
al., 2015, Neuron, 85: 447-449) includes comments on the importance of
the work conducted by Drs. Cayouette and Mattar.
The IRCM research project was funded by the Foundation Fighting
Blindness Canada and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. For
more information, please refer to the article summary published online.