Mechanisms of Lens Morphogenesis and Regeneration
Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia PA
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Abstract
Project Summary In order to regenerate a functional tissue following an injury or to replace a tissue destroyed by the consequences of a pathological disease, the differentiation of stem or progenitor cells must be accompanied by effective strategies to promote tissue morphogenesis. This proposal investigates the mechanisms that guide cell and tissue morphogenesis with the ultimate goal of applying the results to instruct the recapitulation of normal developmental processes in tissue repair and regeneration. The model for these studies is the embryonic lens, ideal for investigating the molecular mechanisms of morphogenesis because its cytoarchitecture defines its function. Morphogenesis of the lens must be precisely executed and its structure maintained in order for it to perform its function of focusing images on the retina. This proposal aims to discover the mechanisms responsible for the two principal morphogenetic events of lens development: 1) the elongation/convergent extension mechanism that establishes the highly elongated lens fiber cell phenotype and 2) the mechanism by which neighboring lens fiber cells are organized into an exact hexagonally packed cellular array. The studies are focused on N-cadherin junctions and their dynamic interactions with different cytoskeletal elements as key modulators of cell and tissue morphogenesis during development. For these studies we developed a number of important culture models including: 1) ex vivo mock cataract surgery cultures where it is possible to examine the response of the lens epithelium to a clinically relevant wounding in its native microenvironment and its ability to regenerate lens-like tissue, 2) primary cultures of lens epithelial cells that differentiate in culture to form mini-lens structures, and 3) epithelial explants where fiber cells both elongate and organize into a highly ordered tissue-like structure; in addition to N-cadherin fiber cell-specific knockouts. These models provide powerful tools with which to examine N-cadherin as a focal point where actin microfilaments, microtubules and intermediate filaments coordinate their function to direct lens morphogenesis with the following questions: What are the mechanisms that drive fiber cell elongation? How do neighboring lens fiber cells interact to form a functional structure? What regulates the organization of fiber cells into a hexagonal array? What stabilizes this unique cytoarchitecture of the lens? How do lens epithelial cells remodel their N-cadherin/cytoskeletal interactions for wound healing and tissue regeneration? The results of these proposed studies are expected to identify the underlying mechanisms responsible for establishing and maintaining cell and tissue cytoarchitecture, knowledge of which would provide substantive targets for guiding effective tissue regeneration in vivo.
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