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From the Skirball Institute for Biomolecular Medicine, New York University Medical Center.
| Introduction |
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| The Components of Lens Polarization |
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A number of experiments have suggested that the retina is a source of fiber cell differentiation factors. When mouse lenses were rotated in situ in the presence or absence of retina, lens repolarization occurred only when retinal tissue remained.3 Consistent with this observation was analysis showing that retina-conditioned medium could stimulate fiber cell differentiation.4
The observations and manipulations described suggest that soluble signaling molecules present in ocular media control lens polarization by regulating the rate and location of cell division in the lens epithelium as well as the differentiation of lens fiber cells. It has been tacitly accepted in turn that the concentration or activity of these signaling molecules must be closely regulated if lens polarization is to be maintained. The signaling molecules that may control lens polarization are discussed later.
| Evidence for Fibroblast Growth Factor Involvement in Lens Polarization |
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Circumstantial evidence has suggested that a gradient of FGF may be in part responsible for controlling lens polarization. This idea is derived from the observation that different cellular responses within the lens lineage are optimally stimulated by different concentrations of FGF.7 Specifically, the half-maximal concentration of FGF required for epithelial cell proliferation is low (0.15 ng/ml), whereas the half-maximal concentration required for differentiation is high (40 ng/ml). This arrangement implies that if an FGF gradient existed in the eye (anterior, low concentration; posterior, high concentration), a polarized lens might be the result. The best evidence that such a gradient exists comes from measurements of FGF activity in ocular media. Using a variety of techniques, it has been shown that FGF activity levels are higher in vitreous than in aqueous.8 The distribution of immunoreactive FGF1 and FGF2 is also consistent with a role for FGFs in the control of lens polarization.9
Experiments using transgenic mice have shown that various members of
the FGF family can act as fiber cell differentiation stimuli in vivo.
The first of these was generated by Robinson et al.,10
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and Lovicu and Overbeek12
who showed that FGF1 (acidic
FGF) expressed from the
A-crystallin promoter and secreted from lens
fiber cells would stimulate adjacent epithelial cells to form fibers. A
number of experiments since then have shown that various FGFs including
FGFs 1, 3, 4, 7, 8, and 9 are also able to stimulate fiber cell
differentiation.
Overexpression studies are limited to showing what a factor can stimulate. For this reason, a number of groups have used dominantnegative FGF receptors13 as a means of inhibiting FGF action and asking whether this signaling pathway is necessary. Although the degree of the phenotypic response varies in different transgenic lines, it is clear that an inhibition of FGF signaling results in diminished fiber cell differentiation.14 15 This provides evidence that the FGF signaling pathways normally function in vivo for fiber cell differentiation. Combined, all these data have led to a general acceptance that FGFs are required for fiber cell differentiation and probably for other aspects of lens development.
However, a number of recent results have initiated a degree of rethinking. Perhaps most surprising is that adult mice made homozygous null for both FGF1 and FGF2 show no defect in lens or eye development on histologic examination (Claudio Basilico, personal communication). These FGF ligands have been the prime candidates for fiber cell differentiation factors, and the absence of phenotype in the null mice makes a clear statement that, although they may participate, they are not necessary for fiber cell differentiation. It is, of course, possible that one of the other FGFs (currently, a family of at least 18 molecules) is critical for fiber cell differentiation or that a number of FGFs are responsible for fiber cell differentiation when their activities are combined. Presumably, as more FGFs are tested for their activity in lens development through both overexpression and activity inhibition, we will learn whether this explanation is valid.
With the information available to date, we should also consider the possibility that stimulation of fiber cell differentiation may not normally be an FGF function in vivo. Fiber cell differentiation in response to FGF overexpression in the lens could be explained as an aberrant response to a level of FGF ligand that is not physiological (although the presence of FGF receptors suggests a role for FGFs in some aspect of lens fiber cell physiology). If FGFs do not normally function in fiber cell differentiation, the most difficult experimental results to explain are those in which differentiation was inhibited with a dominantnegative FGFR1.14 15 The biochemical specificity of such mutant receptors appears unchallenged. If these experiments have been misinterpreted, it is a consequence of our lack of understanding of the complexity of the vivo response.
Experiments performed using the chick as a model system have also contributed to uncertainty about the function of FGFs in fiber cell differentiation. It has been presumed that the mechanism of lens development in different vertebrates would be conserved, at least in the major elements. For this reason, it is surprising that neither recombinant FGFs nor eye-derived growth factor (containing a mixture of FGFs) can stimulate the differentiation of fiber cells from chick lens epithelial explants. In addition, unlike the mouse, expression of a dominantnegative acting FGF receptor in the chick lens (using a retroviral expression vector) does not result in changes to fiber cells that are consistent with an inhibition of fiber cell differentiation (David Beebe, personal communication). As in the mouse,16 the chick lens is known to express FGFR1,17 and it is therefore likely that the signal transduction machinery is present. Thus, we are left with apparently conflicting results in chick and mouse that may argue for evolutionary divergence in the mechanism of lens development.
Consistent with the idea that FGF pathways may not be required for normal lens development and fiber cell differentiation is the recent observation that in chimeric mice generated with ES cells without the FGFR1 gene, the mutant cells make a substantial contribution to the lens, suggesting that FGFR1 is not required for normal lens development.12 These data are not necessarily at odds with previous experiments inhibiting FGF receptor function in the lens,14 15 because messenger RNAs for FGFR2 and FGFR3 are expressed in elongating lens fiber cells.16 18 19 To summarize, although none of the evidence available so far is conclusive, the requirement for FGF signaling during normal lens development has become less certain. In the remaining sections of the review, we consider alternative stimuli.
| Evidence for Insulin-like Growth Factor-I Involvement in Fiber Cell Differentiation |
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In contrast, rat lens epithelial explants differentiate poorly in
response to IGF-I alone with a limited increase (compared with the
response to FGF) in their content of
-, ß-, and
-crystallin.22
However, it has been shown that when
combined, IGF-I and FGF synergize in stimulating
differentiation22
and that a brief (2-hour) exposure of
rat lens epithelial cells to FGF permits fiber differentiation when
IGF-I is subsequently applied.23
From these data, it can
be suggested that in rodents FGF and IGF-I may act in concert to guide
the differentiation of lens fiber cells. Somewhat at odds with these in
vitro data is the recent observation that IGF-I overexpression in the
mouse lens results in increased lens epithelial proliferation but not
in differentiation (S. Shirke, M. Robinson, P. Overbeek and RAL,
unpublished data). This tends to argue that in vivo, the
primary function of IGF-I in the rodent lens may be a stimulus for cell
division. A detailed characterization of lens development in mice in
which IGF-I signaling is deficient may provide additional evidence for
the role of this signaling pathway. As in the case of FGF, data
examining IGF-I function in lens development may argue that birds and
rodents have diverged in the mechanism for control of fiber cell
differentiation. It will be particularly interesting to determine in
vivo whether a dominant negative IGF-I receptor can block fiber cell
differentiation in the chick.
| Other Candidates for Fiber Cell Differentiation Factors |
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The signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT) proteins are substrates of the receptor-associated Janus kinases (Jaks). When Jaks are activated by ligand binding, STATs become phosphorylated and translocate to the nucleus. In turn, they are involved in transcriptional activation.25 The presence of a phosphorylated form of STAT 3 in freshly isolated chick lens fiber cells implies that a ligand that can activate the JakSTAT signaling pathway may be involved in regulating fiber cell differentiation.26 Because none of the candidate fiber cell differentiation factors identified to date is known to signal through the JakSTAT pathway, this observation identifies a promising possibility.
| Conclusions |
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| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Commercial relationships policy: N.
Corresponding author: Richard A. Lang, Skirball Institute for Biomolecular Medicine, Developmental Genetics Program, Cell Biology and Pathology Departments, New York University Medical Center, 540 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016. E-mail: lang{at}saturn.med.nyu.edu
| References |
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