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doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.00446

MRC Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology and Cell Biology Unit,
University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
* Present address: Stanford University School of Medicine, Fairchild Building,
299 Campus Drive, Stanford, CA 94305-5125, USA
Author for correspondence (e-mail:
m.cayouette{at}stanford.edu)
Accepted 20 February 2003
Asymmetric segregation of cell-fate determinants during cell division plays an important part in generating cell diversity in invertebrates. We showed previously that cells in the neonatal rat retina divide at various orientations and that some dividing cells asymmetrically distribute the cell-fate determinant Numb to the two daughter cells. Here, we test the possibility that such asymmetric divisions contribute to retinal cell diversification. We have used long-term videomicroscopy of green-fluorescent-protein (GFP)-labeled retinal explants from neonatal rats to visualize the plane of cell division and follow the differentiation of the daughter cells. We found that cells that divided with a horizontal mitotic spindle, where both daughter cells should inherit Numb, tended to produce daughters that became the same cell type, whereas cells that divided with a vertical mitotic spindle, where only one daughter cell should inherit Numb, tended to produce daughters that became different. Moreover, overexpression of Numb in the dividing cells promoted the development of photoreceptor cells at the expense of interneurons and Müller glial cells. These findings indicate that the plane of cell division influences cell-fate choice in the neonatal rat retina and support the hypothesis that the asymmetric segregation of Numb normally influences some of these choices.
Key words: Numb, Retina, Rat, Cell division
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