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Cadmium affects retinogenesis during zebrafish embryonic development. | LitMetric

Cadmium affects retinogenesis during zebrafish embryonic development.

Toxicol Appl Pharmacol

Department of Biology and Chemistry, City University of Hong Kong, 83 Tat Chee Avenue, Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR, China.

Published: February 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • Ocular malformations, specifically microphthalmia, were induced in zebrafish embryos exposed to cadmium from 4 to 24 hours post-fertilization, leading to significant eye defects.
  • Behavioral tests revealed that these cadmium-exposed embryos were functionally blind, exhibiting hyperpigmentation and lacking a camouflage response to light changes.
  • Investigations into retinal development showed diminished retinal progenitor cells, reduced retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), absent photoreceptors, and impaired neuron propagation, ultimately linking these cellular abnormalities to the visual impairments observed in the affected embryos.

Article Abstract

Ocular malformations are commonly observed in embryos of aquatic species after exposure to toxicants. Using zebrafish embryos as the model organism, we showed that cadmium exposure from sphere stage (4 hpf) to end of segmentation stage (24 hpf) induced microphthalmia in cadmium-treated embryos. Embryos with eye defects were then assessed for visual abilities. Cadmium-exposed embryos were behaviorally blind, showing hyperpigmentation and loss of camouflage response to light. We investigated the cellular basis of the formation of the small eyes phenotype and the induction of blindness by studying retina development and retinotectal projections. Retinal progenitors were found in cadmium-treated embryos albeit in smaller numbers. The number of retinal ganglion cells (RGC), the first class of retinal cells to differentiate during retinogenesis, was reduced, while photoreceptor cells, the last batch of retinal neurons to differentiate, were absent. Cadmium also affected the propagation of neurons in neurogenic waves. The neurons remained in the ventronasal area and failed to spread across the retina. Drastically reduced RGC axons and disrupted optic stalk showed that the optic nerves did not extend from the retina beyond the chiasm into the tectum. Our data suggested that impairment in neuronal differentiation of the retina, disruption in RGC axon formation and absence of cone photoreceptors were the causes of microphthalmia and visual impairment in cadmium-treated embryos.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.taap.2008.11.013DOI Listing

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