Influence of cell fate mechanisms upon retinal mosaic formation: a modelling study
- 1 December 2002
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Development
- Vol. 129 (23) , 5399-5408
- https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.00118
Abstract
Many types of retinal neurone are arranged in a spatially regular manner so that the visual scene is uniformly sampled. Several mechanisms are thought to be involved in the development of regular cellular positioning. One early-acting mechanism is the lateral inhibition of neighbouring cells from acquiring the same fate, mediated by Delta-Notch signalling. We have used computer modelling to test whether lateral inhibition might transform an initial population of undifferentiated cells into more regular populations of two types of differentiated cells. Initial undifferentiated cells were positioned randomly, subject only to a minimal distance constraint. Each undifferentiated cell then acquired either primary or secondary fate using one of several lateral inhibition mechanisms. Mosaic regularity was assessed using the regularity index and the packing factor. We found that for irregular undifferentiated mosaics, the arrangement of resulting primary (but not secondary) fate cells was more regular than in the initial undifferentiated population. However, for regular undifferentiated mosaics, no further increases in the regularity of the primary fate mosaics were observed. We have used this model to test the specific hypothesis that on- and off-centre retinal ganglion cells emerge from an initial, irregular undifferentiated population of ganglion cells. Lateral inhibition can subdivide an initially irregular population into two types of cell that are mildly regular. However,lateral inhibition alone is insufficient to produce mosaics of the same regularity as observed experimentally. Likewise, and in contrast to earlier reports, cell death alone is insufficient to match the regularity of experimental mosaics. We conclude that lateral inhibition can transform irregular distributions into regular mosaics, upon which subsequent processes(such as lateral cell movement or cell death) can further refine mosaic regularity.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pattern Formation of the Cone Mosaic in the Zebrafish Retina: A Cell Rearrangement ModelJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2002
- Cell‐type specific dendritic contacts between retinal ganglion cells during developmentJournal of Neurobiology, 2001
- Filopodia: Fickle fingers of cell fate?Current Biology, 1999
- Formation of Cone Mosaic of Zebrafish RetinaJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1999
- Pattern Formation by Lateral Inhibition with Feedback: a Mathematical Model of Delta-Notch Intercellular SignallingJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1996
- Spatial properties of retinal mosaics: An empirical evaluation of some existing measuresVisual Neuroscience, 1996
- Distribution of differentiated cells in a cell sheet under the lateral inhibition rule of differentiationJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1991
- Alpha ganglion cells in mammalian retinae: Common properties, species differences, and some comments on other ganglion cellsVisual Neuroscience, 1991
- A sweepline algorithm for Voronoi diagramsAlgorithmica, 1987
- Morphology and topography of on- and off-alpha cells in the cat retinaProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1981