4.5 Article

Identification of CD44 as a cell surface marker for Muller glia precursor cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 115, Issue 6, Pages 1633-1642

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.2010.07072.x

Keywords

CD44; Muller glia; retina; surface antigen

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P>In the retina, both neurons and glia differentiate from a common progenitor population. CD44 cell surface antigen is a hyaluronic acid receptor expressed on mature Muller glial cells. We found that in the developing mouse retina, expression of CD44 was transiently observed at or around birth in a subpopulation of c-kit-positive retinal progenitor cells. During in vitro culture, purified CD44/c-kit-positive retinal progenitor cells exclusively differentiated into Muller glial cells and not into neurons, suggesting that CD44 marks a subpopulation of retinal progenitor cells that are fated to become glia. Over-expression of CD44 inhibited the extension of processes by Muller glial cells and neurons. Notch signaling is known to be involved in the specification of retinal progenitors into a glial fate. Activation of Notch signaling increased the number of CD44-positive cells, and treatment with the Notch signal inhibitor, DAPT, at early, but not later, stages of retinal development abolished both CD44-positive cells and Muller glial cells. Together, CD44 was identified as an early cell surface marker of the Muller glia lineage, and Notch signalling was involved in commitment of retinal progenitor cells to CD44 positive Muller glial precursor cells.

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