Abstract
The intrinsic and extrinsic factors that regulate vertebrate photoreceptor specification and differentiation are complex, and our understanding of all the players is far from complete. Her9, the zebrafish ortholog of human HES4, is a basic helix-loop-helix-orange transcriptional repressor that regulates neurogenesis in several developmental contexts. We have previously shown that her9 is upregulated during chronic rod photoreceptor degeneration and regeneration in adult zebrafish, but little is known about the role of her9 during retinal development. To better understand the function of Her9 in the retina, we generated zebrafish her9 CRISPR mutants. Her9 homozygous mutants displayed striking retinal phenotypes, including decreased numbers of rods and red/green cones, whereas blue and UV cones were relatively unaffected. The reduction in rods and red/green cones correlated with defects in photoreceptor subtype lineage specification. The remaining rods and double cones displayed abnormal outer segments, and elevated levels of apoptosis. In addition to the photoreceptor defects, her9 mutants also possessed a reduced proliferative ciliary marginal zone, and decreased and disorganized Müller glia. Mutation of her9 was larval lethal, with no mutants surviving past 13 days post fertilization. Our results reveal a previously undescribed role for Her9/Hes4 in photoreceptor differentiation, maintenance, and survival.
Subject terms: Differentiation, Zebrafish, Developmental neurogenesis
Introduction
The vertebrate retina is a highly conserved tissue of the central nervous system (CNS) that captures and converts light into an electrical signal. The neural retina is composed of three layers; the ganglion cell layer (GCL), inner nuclear layer (INL) and outer nuclear layer (ONL); the light-sensitive rod and cone photoreceptors reside in the ONL. The six classes of retinal neurons and single glial cell type in the retina all differentiate from a single pool of multipotent retinal progenitor cells (RPCs). Across all vertebrates studied to date, specification and differentiation of retinal cell types occurs in a synchronized and largely conserved manner. The ganglion cells are born first and the rods, bipolar cells, and Müller glia differentiate last1. Cone photoreceptor differentiation generally occurs before the rods. The development of photoreceptor cell identity is influenced by many factors, both intrinsic and extrinsic. Cone and rod photoreceptor specification, cell cycle exit, and differentiation are accompanied by the expression of transcription factors such as otx2 and crx, then rod or cone-specific factors such as Nr2e3 and trβ22,3. Photoreceptor differentiation is also regulated extrinsically by Hedgehog (Hh), thyroid hormone (TH), Notch, Wnt, retinoic acid (RA), and fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling pathways, to name a few4. Our knowledge of the precise molecular determinants of photoreceptor subtype differentiation is far from complete. Understanding how photoreceptor cell development is regulated is essential for understanding the pathogenesis of blinding retinal degenerative diseases such as retinitis pigmentosa and macular degeneration. Several approaches have been developed to understand retinal development, one of the most prominent being the generation and characterization of genetic mutants. Due to its conserved retinal structure and function, as well as the extensive genetic homology with humans, zebrafish have become an appealing model for interrogating the role of specific genes in retinal cell type differentiation.
In this study, we examine the role of the transcription factor Hairy and enhancer of split related 9 (Her9) in retinal development. Her genes belong to a family of basic-Helix-Loop-Helix-Orange (bHLH-O) DNA binding proteins5, and are homologs of the Hairy and Enhancer-of-split genes in Drosophila and of Hes/Hey genes in mammals. The zebrafish genome contains 19 hairy-related (her) genes which have been shown to play essential roles in developmental processes such as somitogenesis, neural tube and nervous system development, floor plate development, cell cycle exit, and apoptosis6,7. Her proteins often function as downstream effectors of the Notch-Delta signaling pathway and mediate cross-talk between Notch and other pathways8. A variety of members in the three hairy classes are also regulated by Hh, VEGF, Nodal, FGF, and RA signaling9–13.
Zebrafish Her9 shares homology with mouse and human Hes19, but is more closely related by sequence comparison and synteny analysis to human HES414. As Hes4 is absent from the mouse and rat genomes, zebrafish provide a unique opportunity to explore the function of this transcription factor during retinal development. In zebrafish, her9 is expressed in ectodermal tissues15 and in inter-pro-neural domains during embryonic development16, where morpholino knockdown suggested it acts downstream of Bmp signaling. Recent studies have also shown that Her9 functions during inner ear development, where it defines the posterolateral non-neurogenic field downstream of tbx1 expression and RA signaling9. Interestingly, her9 expression was shown to be independent of Notch-Delta signaling in several developmental contexts15,16, suggesting that it does not function as a classical Notch effector gene. In the post-embryonic Medaka and Xenopus retina, Her9 regulates proliferation of retinal stem cells in the peripheral ciliary marginal zone (CMZ)14,17. Finally, her9 expression is upregulated during the specific degeneration and regeneration of rod photoreceptors in the zebrafish retina, suggesting a role for this transcription factor in retinal regeneration18. Although these studies strongly implicate her9 in regulating continual neurogenesis and injury-induced regeneration in the post-embryonic retina, the function of her9 during embryonic retinal development has not been thoroughly investigated.
In this study, we generated her9 mutants using the CRISPR/Cas9 system to determine whether her9 has a required role in retinal development. Here, we demonstrate that loss of Her9 causes a significant decrease in rod photoreceptors, subsets of cone photoreceptors, Müller glia cells, and CMZ size. We also find that her9 mutant photoreceptors have abnormal outer segments and undergo apoptosis. Finally, we show that her9 expression in the retina is regulated by RA signaling, but RA responsiveness is not completely lost in her9 mutants. Taken together, our study confirms the requirement for Her9/HES4 in retinal stem cell proliferation and identifies Her9/HES4 as a novel regulator of photoreceptor specification, maintenance, and survival.
Results
Her9 expression during retinal development
Previous studies in zebrafish have described her9 expression patterns in the early embryo10,15,16 and her9 expression has also been documented in the CMZ of the post-embryonic medaka retina17. We investigated the expression of her9 during the critical stages of retina development. We used fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) to detect her9 mRNA in the developing zebrafish retina between 24 and 72 hpf, a time period which encompasses the progression from a pseudostratified proliferative retinal neuro-epithelium to a fully laminated, functional retina containing all retinal cell types. At 24 hpf, her9 was expressed throughout the lens and retina, but most predominately in the ventral portion of the retina, and in a ring around the lens (Fig. 1A–A″). At 48 hpf, her9 expression became restricted to the undifferentiated peripheral retina (Fig. 1B–B″). By 72 hpf, her9 expression was only detected in a small patch of cells within the persistently neurogenic CMZ (Fig. 1C–D″). Taken together, the expression of her9 throughout the undifferentiated embryonic retina and in the proliferative CMZ suggests that it functions in retinal progenitor cells and potentially plays a role in retinal stem cell proliferation or maintenance.
Generating her9 mutants using CRISPR/Cas9
To explore the role of her9 during retinal development, we used the CRISPR/Cas9 system to introduce mutations in the her9 gene, targeting a region of exon 1 upstream of the bHLH domain (Fig. S1A). We recovered two her9 mutant alleles, one carrying a 1-bp deletion and the other a 1-bp insertion at the target site (Fig. S1B). Both mutations cause a frameshift resulting in a premature stop codon. Both mutations introduced novel restriction sites, allowing for genotyping by RFLP analysis (Fig. S1C). We used qPCR to investigate her9 expression in her9−/− zebrafish, and observed a significant reduction in her9 mRNA levels, suggesting that the mutations resulted in nonsense-mediated decay (Fig. S1D). We also used a HES4 antibody to detect Her9 protein, which confirmed a significant decrease in expression in her9 mutants (Fig. S1E). These results indicate that the CRISPR-generated genetic lesion in her9 is a loss of function mutation. Both mutant alleles presented similar phenotypes (Fig. S1F–G) so here we present data collected from the 1 bp insertion mutant.
Characterization of the her9 mutant phenotype
We first characterized the progeny of her9 heterozygous incrosses by light microscopy. At 24 hpf, her9 mutants appeared somewhat developmentally delayed with lighter pigmentation and a smaller body size when compared to wild type (WT) and heterozygous siblings (Fig. 2B–C). The mutants also displayed delayed development of the midbrain and hindbrain ventricles (Fig. 2B), which appeared around 36 hpf (Fig. S3A–C). At 48 hpf, mutant embryos were smaller in body size, microphthalmic, and some displayed pericardial edema (Fig. 2D–E). At 72 hpf, homozygous mutants displayed a phenotypic range from mild to severe, where some mutant embryos looked fairly normal, and others displayed similar defects to those seen at earlier time points (Fig. 2F–G). In wild type (WT) and her9 heterozygotes, the swim bladder was fully developed by 5 dpf (Fig. 2A). In contrast, her9 homozygous mutant larvae did not develop a swim bladder (Fig. 2A) and displayed an abnormal swimming pattern, although quantification of swimming distance and velocity was not significantly different (Fig. S2). Other mutant phenotypes observed at 5 dpf included an enlarged liver, curved body, and craniofacial defects (Fig. 2A). At 12 days post fertilization (dpf) we noticed a significant decrease in larval survival with approximately 29% mortality. None of the her9−/− larvae survived beyond 13 dpf, indicating that loss of Her9 results in larval lethality (Fig. 2H).
To rule out off-target contributions to the mutant phenotype, we performed a her9 mRNA rescue experiment. Full-length her9 mRNA was microinjected into one-cell stage embryos from her9 heterozygous in-crosses, then the embryos were imaged and scored for the earliest visible mutant phenotype, which was lack of a clearly defined midbrain-hindbrain boundary and a missing midcerebral vein (MeCV) at 24 hpf (imaged by fluorescence microscopy of the fli1:GFP transgene; Fig. S3A–C). Whereas only 5.9% of uninjected her9 homozygous mutant larvae had a detectable MeCV at 24 hpf, 80% of the her9 mutant embryos that received her9 mRNA had a MeCV (Fig. S3C–D). We also observed a significant increase in the vasculature around the eye and heart in mRNA-injected mutant embryos, as well as a larger eye size (Fig. S3B–C). Combined, these results indicate that the phenotypes described herein are specifically due to the mutation of her9, and also that Her9 may be required for proper vasculature development.
Her9 mutants lack a visual background adaptation response and display visual dysfunction
We observed that at 5 dpf, a significant number of the progeny of her9+/− incrosses (~ 27%) appeared more darkly pigmented after prolonged light exposure when compared to their siblings. This suggested that her9 mutants may lack a visually mediated background adaptation (VBA) response, a neuroendocrine camouflage response that allows zebrafish to manipulate their melanin granules in response to light exposure to match their background. Several previous studies have shown that the VBA response depends on retinal input19–21, thus an absent VBA response can indicate visual impairment.
To determine whether the lack of a VBA response was associated with the her9 mutant genotype, we first dark-adapted the larvae for two hours, then placed them in ambient light for 30 min, imaged and scored them as dark or light, then extracted genomic DNA for genotyping. After light exposure, 51 out of 70 larvae were scored as light and 100% of those embryos genotyped as WT or heterozygous (p < 0.0001; Fig. 3A,C). In contrast, 19 of the larvae scored as dark, 63% of which genotyped as homozygous mutants (p = 0.0051; Fig. 3B–C). From these data, we conclude that her9 mutants lack a normal VBA response, which could suggest visual impairment and possible retinal defects.
Given their lack of VBA response, we wondered whether the her9 mutants had any functional visual deficit. To investigate this, we used the optokinetic response (OKR) assay, which is a behavioral test that measures the larvae’s ability to perform a combination of smooth pursuit and rapid saccade eye movements in response to a moving pattern of alternating black and white vertical stripes22. Individual larvae from a her9 heterozygous incross were screened at 5 dpf over three 30-s trials (n = 159), and then genotyped after screening. Whereas 116 out of 129 WT and heterozygous larvae displayed a positive OKR response, none of the her9 mutants responded with saccadic movements in the OKR assay (0 out of 29 tested; p < 0.0001; Fig. 3D–E). We conclude from these data that the loss of Her9 causes impaired visual responses at 5 dpf.
Her9 mutants display a decrease in rod photoreceptors and rod outer segment defects
Next, we used immunohistochemistry (IHC) on retinal tissue sections to examine the number and morphology of various retinal cell types in WT and her9 mutant larvae, starting with the rod photoreceptors. Using a rod photoreceptor specific antibody (4C12), we observed numerous rod photoreceptors in the dorsal and ventral portions of the WT retina at 12 dpf (Fig. 4A). At higher magnification the rod outer segments were easily detected (Fig. 4A′). In contrast, her9 mutant retinas displayed a significant decrease in rod photoreceptors which was especially apparent in the dorsal retina (Fig. 4B). At higher magnification we also observed a marked decrease in antibody labeling of the outer segments of the remaining her9 mutant rods compared to the WT retina.
To more thoroughly examine the effects of the her9 mutation on rod photoreceptor number and morphology, her9 heterozygotes were crossed onto the XOPs:GFP transgenic background, which fluorescently labels rod photoreceptors23. The her9 heterozygotes on the XOPs:GFP background were in-crossed, and whole eyes were removed from larvae at 5 dpf and imaged by confocal microscopy, while the rest of the body was used for genotyping. Using this approach, we observed a significant decrease in GFP+ rod photoreceptors across the entire her9 mutant retina when compared to the WT (Fig. 4C–D), confirming our previous results.
The remaining heads were pooled together based on genotype and cryo-sectioned, followed by counting of GFP+ cells. We observed a 69% reduction in the number of GFP+ rods in her9 mutant larvae compared to WT (avg. 18 per 100 µm in her9 mutants vs. 58 per 100 µm in WT), which was confirmed via qPCR for rhodopsin (Fig. 4K–L). Finally, we used the 1D1 antibody to label the rod outer segments in WT and her9 mutant retinal cryosections. In the her9 mutant embryos 1D1 labeling of outer segments was severely reduced compared to the WT embryos (Fig. 4E–G′, H–J′). Taken together, these data demonstrate that loss of Her9 causes a large decrease in rod photoreceptor number and abnormal rod photoreceptor outer segment morphology.
Cone outer segments are truncated in her9 mutants
We used the Zpr1 antibody to detect the red–green double cones in WT and her9 mutant retinas. At 12 dpf, we initially did not observe an obvious decrease in cone number in the her9 mutant retina (Fig. 5A–B). However, at higher magnification, we detected gaps in the spacing of the double cones, as well as shorter cone outer segments, in her9 mutant retinas (Fig. 5A′–B′). To examine this further, we crossed the her9 mutation onto the TαC:GFP transgenic background, which fluorescently labels all cone photoreceptor subtypes24; (Fig. 5C–H). There was a significant decrease in the number of cone photoreceptors in the her9 mutants compared to WT (Fig. 5I). We used the Zpr3 antibody to label the outer segments of the double cones and rods, and found a noticeable reduction in antibody labeling in her9 mutant retinas (Fig. 5C–H). These results demonstrate that the loss of Her9 causes a decrease in the number of double cones, and has profound effects on red and green cone outer segment morphology.
Her9 mutants display cone subtype-specific phenotypes
We next investigated whether all cone subtypes were equally affected by the loss of Her9, using cone opsin-specific antibodies to perform IHCs on retinal cryosections as described above. We again observed a significant reduction (42%) in the number of green cone photoreceptors and truncated green cone outer segments in the her9 mutant retinas compared to their WT siblings (Fig. 6A–B,G). Interestingly, IHC with the UV- and blue-cone opsin antibodies revealed a much smaller decrease in number for those cone subtypes in her9 mutant retinas compared to the decrease in green cones (6.6% and 5%, respectively; Fig. 6C–F′, H and I) and we did not detect truncation in the blue and UV cone outer segments (Fig. 6D′–F′). qPCR for long-, medium- and short-wavelength opsins confirmed a small decrease in UV- and blue- cone opsin expression and a large decrease in red cone opsin expression (Fig. 6J). Green cone opsin expression was also modestly reduced by qPCR. The results of these experiments suggest that loss of Her9 causes variable reductions in all cone photoreceptors and defects in outer segments that are specific to red/green cones and rods.
Müller glia abnormalities in her9 mutants
To determine whether loss of Her9 affects other late-born cell types, we crossed the her9 mutation onto the gfap:GFP transgenic background, which fluorescently labels retinal Müller glia25. At 5 dpf, her9 homozygous mutants showed a significant reduction of GFP+ Müller glia compared to their WT and heterozygous siblings (p < 0.0001; Fig. 7A–C). We also observed a decrease in GFP+ glial cells across the entire her9 mutant embryo (brain and enteric nervous system) at this stage (Fig. S4A–D′). In addition, the GFP+ Müller glia that were present in her9 mutant retinas displayed a disorganized pattern, with their cell bodies located at various depths of the INL layer, rather than forming a uniform row as in the WT retinas (Fig. 7A′,B′). We also observed a lack of processes from the Müller glia spanning the retina in the her9 mutants compared to their WT siblings. These data indicate that the loss of Her9 not only causes a reduction in the number of Müller glia, but also distorts the morphology, organization and patterning of the Müller glial cells that do develop.
Loss of Her9 has minimal effects on other retinal cell types
Does the loss of Her9 disrupt development of all retinal cell types? To address this question, we used transgenic lines or IHC with cell-type specific antibodies for ganglion cells, amacrine cells, and horizontal cells. First, we crossed her9 heterozygous zebrafish onto the ath5:GFP transgenic background26 which fluorescently labels ganglion cells and the optic nerve (Fig. 8A–B). We observed a modest decrease in GFP expression in the her9 mutant retinas compared to WT (Fig. 8B; arrow). We followed this up with IHC using the HuC/D antibody, which labels both ganglion cells and amacrine cells. We observed a significant decrease in the number of ganglion cells in her9 mutant retinas compared to the WT and heterozygous siblings (Fig. 8C–F, K; p < 0.0001). However, the number of amacrine cells was not significantly different in the WT versus her9 mutant retinas at 5 dpf (Fig. 8M).
The Prox1 antibody was then used to assess horizontal cells in the retinas of her9 ± in-cross progeny (Fig. 8G–J′). There were no morphological differences in the horizontal cells of her9 mutants compared to WT (Fig. 8H′, J′), and the number of horizontal cells was not significantly reduced (Fig. 8L). These results demonstrate that loss of Her9 causes a mild decrease in ganglion cell number, but does not alter the numbers of amacrine or horizontal cells, and does not disrupt the morphology of these retinal cell types. This indicates that the morphological defects due to loss of Her9 are specific to photoreceptors and the Müller glia.
Loss of Her9 causes a progressive collapse of the CMZ
Previous studies of the post-embryonic Medaka and Xenopus retina showed that her9 regulates the proliferation of the retinal stem cells in the CMZ17. Therefore, we wanted to investigate whether germline mutation of zebrafish her9 would affect the establishment of the CMZ during retinal development. We collected zebrafish larvae at 72 hpf, then prepared retinal sections for PCNA immunolabeling, which detects cells in S-phase (Fig. 9A–A′). We observed a significant decrease in the area of PCNA+ cells in the CMZ (defined as the region directly adjacent to the end of the inner plexiform layer) of mutant retinas in comparison to their WT and heterozygous siblings. To determine whether the her9 mutant CMZ could recover to a normal size later in development, we immunolabeled 5 dpf retinal sections with the PCNA antibody. We again observed a significantly smaller PCNA+ CMZ in 5 dpf her9 mutant retinas compared to their WT and heterozygous siblings (Fig. 9B–B′). Quantification of both the PCNA-labeled CMZ area and fluorescence intensity confirmed a significant decrease in the her9 mutants compared to WT and heterozygous siblings (Fig. 9C–D). Interestingly, the lack of proliferating cells in the CMZ became more severe from 72 hpf to 5 dpf in her9 mutants, indicating that there is a decrease in the number of proliferating cells in the mutant CMZ over time. Taken together, our results confirm that Her9 regulates the proliferation or maintenance of stem cells in the CMZ.
Her9 mutants display abnormal expression of photoreceptor lineage genes
To begin to address the mechanism underlying the photoreceptor phenotypes of her9 mutant retinas, we first examined whether loss of her9 affects the specification of retinal progenitor cells towards rod and cone lineages. Crx is a transcription factor that plays a critical role in the specification of all photoreceptor subtypes27. We used FISH on retinal cryosections to examine the expression of crx at 48 and 72 hpf. Starting at 48 hpf, the expression of crx spreads across the WT retina in a ventral to dorsal fan-like manner (Fig. 10A–A′). In her9 mutant retinas we observed a similar expression pattern of crx, albeit with reduced signal intensity (Fig. 10B–B′); by 72 hpf, crx expression in her9 mutant retinas was not significantly different from WT (Supplemental Fig. S5A–B′). Control sense probes showed no signal (Fig. 10C,F). Therefore, we conclude that loss of Her9 does not perturb specification of photoreceptor progenitors.
Next, we examined expression of photoreceptor subtype-specific transcription factors. Nr2e3 is responsible for the activation of rod photoreceptor genes and repression of cone genes in photoreceptor progenitors28. At 48 hpf in the WT retina, we observed robust expression of Nr2e3 throughout the ONL of the retina (Fig. 10D–D′). In contrast, in her9 mutants, there was significantly less Nr2e3 expression within the ONL in comparison to the WT (Fig. 10E–E′). At 72 hpf the expression of Nr2e3 in the her9 mutant retina had increased relative to 48 hpf, but the expression pattern remained disorganized relative to WT (Fig. S5C–D′). Taken together, this result indicates that the rod photoreceptors in her9 mutants are specified but their differentiation is abnormal.
Next, we investigated whether the red cone photoreceptor lineage was disrupted in her9 mutants. To do this, we used whole mount in situ hybridization (WISH) to investigate the expression of trβ2 in the developing retina at 48 and 72 hpf in progeny from WT and her9 heterozygous incrosses. The eyes were then removed from the embryos for imaging by light microscopy. In WT larvae, most of the individuals displayed robust expression of trβ2 in the ventral portion of the eye and along the ONL circumference where the cone photoreceptors are located (the “normal” pattern), although a few WT larval eyes (5.3%) showed fainter expression in the ventral portion of the eye and in the ONL (n = 9 out of 177; Fig. 10G–H). In contrast, 28.7% of the larval eyes from her9 heterozygous incrosses (n = 131 out of 456) displayed a decrease in the expression of trβ2 and patches of missing expression around the circumference of the retina, representing an “abnormal pattern” for trβ2 expression (χ2 analysis, p < 0.01; Fig. 10I). qPCR analysis at 48 hpf and 72 hpf confirmed the reduced expression of trβ2 in her9 mutants compared to their wildtype siblings (Fig. 10J). Therefore, we conclude that loss of Her9 disrupts the specification of the red cone lineage.
Her9 mutant photoreceptors undergo apoptosis
In addition to abnormal specification, the reduced numbers of rods and double cones in her9 mutants could reflect a decrease in survival of differentiated photoreceptors. To determine whether this was the case, we performed TUNEL labeling on retinal cryosections from WT and her9 mutant retinas from 24 hpf to 5 dpf to identify apoptotic cells. At 24 hpf, we observed a slight increase in TUNEL+ cells in the lens of her9 mutants compared to WT, but no cell death in the retina (Fig. 11A–A′, E). At 48 hpf, there was no difference in TUNEL+ cells between WT and her9 mutant retinas (Fig. 11B–B′, E). However, at 72 hpf we observed a significant increase in TUNEL+ cells in the GCL, INL, ONL, and CMZ of her9 mutant retinas compared to the WT (Fig. 11C–C′, E, F). Interestingly, we observed a noticeable cluster of TUNEL+ cells in the dorsal peripheral retina adjacent to the CMZ (Fig. 11C′). Additionally, some of the TUNEL+ cells in the INL had the morphology of Müller glia, which could indicate the Müller glia were dying, but could also be due to Müller glia phagocytosis of other dying cells (Fig. 11C′). By 5 dpf, apoptosis in her9 mutants remained elevated in the ONL, CMZ, and INL relative to WT retinas (Fig. 11D–D′, G). These data indicate that Her9 is required for the survival of post-embryonic retinal progenitor cells, photoreceptors, and possibly cells in the INL.
RA regulates her9 expression in the retina but Her9 is not required for RA’s effects on opsin expression
What regulates Her9 activity in the retina? Several previous studies have demonstrated that unlike many Hes/Hey/Her family members, Her9 does not respond to Notch signaling10,15,17. However, it has been shown that Her9 is downstream of RA signaling in the developing inner ear9. Given that RA signaling is critical for eye development29,30 and has demonstrated effects on photoreceptor differentiation and opsin expression 31–33, we hypothesized that Her9 functions downstream of RA to regulate opsin expression and photoreceptor survival. We used in situ hybridization and qPCR on 36 hpf embryos to determine whether her9 expression in the retina is altered by manipulation of the RA signaling pathway. Zebrafish embryos were treated in the dark from 24 to 36 hpf with 1 µM RA, 100 µM of the RA signaling inhibitor diethylaminobenzaldehyde (DEAB), or 0.3% DMSO alone as a carrier control. Embryos were then processed for WISH or qPCR to detect her9 expression. In control embryos, her9 expression was observed in the peripheral CMZ and around the lens and choroid fissure as described above (Fig. 12A). We observed a noticeable decrease in her9 expression in the retina when embryos were treated with DEAB (Fig. 12A′). In contrast, there was a significant increase in the expression of her9 all across the retina when embryos were exposed to RA (Fig. 12A″). qPCR analysis for her9 expression confirmed the decrease and increase in her9 expression following DEAB and RA treatments, respectively (Fig. 12B). From these data, we conclude that her9 expression in the retina is regulated by RA signaling.
Previous work demonstrated that exposure to exogenous RA between 2 and 5 dpf resulted in increased rhodopsin expression and decreased red, UV, and blue cone opsin expression in zebrafish34. To test the hypothesis that Her9 is required to mediate the effects of RA signaling on photoreceptor opsin expression, we treated WT and her9 mutant zebrafish with RA from 24 to 48 hpf (for rods) or 24 hpf to 5 dpf (for cones), and then examined XOPS:GFP or TαC:GFP transgene and cone opsin expression by IHC. In WT zebrafish, RA treatment resulted in a significant increase in GFP+ rhodopsin expressing cells dorsally and ventrally compared to the untreated retinas, and a significant decrease in UV and green cone opsin expression, as expected (Fig. 12 and Fig. S6). Surprisingly, an increase in GFP+ rhodopsin expressing cells and a decrease in UV and green cone opsin expressing cells were also observed in RA-treated her9 mutants when compared to control treated mutants (Fig. 12 and Fig. S6). Taken together, these data suggest that although her9 expression in the retina is downstream of RA signaling, Her9 is not strictly required for the effects of RA on rod and cone opsin expression.
Discussion
The zebrafish her9 gene is the ortholog of the human HES4 gene and is one of the least studied bHLH-O transcription factors. This is largely due to the fact that a Hes4 homolog is absent from the mouse and rat genomes14. Since HES4 is expressed in humans and has been shown to play critical roles in the development of several vertebrate tissues, further investigations of Her9/HES4 function are needed. Indeed, the human HES4 locus lies within a critical region on the p arm of chromosome 1 that is frequently deleted in 1p terminal deletion syndrome, the most common chromosomal terminal deletion syndrome in humans, affecting ~ 1/5,000 newborns. Approximately 80% patients with this syndrome display eye malformations and/or visual impairment 35,36. Other phenotypes that we have observed in her9 mutants are also consistent with some of the common features of 1p terminal deletion syndrome, such as developmental delay, craniofacial abnormalities, and growth and feeding problems. Therefore, it is possible that HES4 is a novel candidate gene contributing to phenotypes associated with this disorder. To our knowledge, ours is the first study to describe a germline loss of function mutation of her9/HES4, which we believe will be a powerful resource for elucidating its role in several developmental contexts.
In this study, we focused on the role of Her9 during retinal development. We observed her9 expression predominantly in the ventral most portion of the developing retina at 24 hpf, which localized to the ciliary marginal zone (CMZ) around 36 hpf until at least 5 dpf (Fig. 1). This expression pattern is consistent with what has previously been described for her9 in Xenopus and Medaka14,17, suggesting a conserved mode of action in the developing retina at least across fish and amphibians.
To characterize the role of Her9 in zebrafish development, we used CRISPR/Cas9 to generate loss of function mutations in her9. The mutations caused frame-shifts, and early termination codons, leading to nonsense-mediated decay of her9 mRNA, which is supported by our sequencing, qPCR and Western blot data. The her9 mutants appear developmentally delayed at around 20 hpf but by 72 hpf many her9 mutant larvae look similar to their WT siblings. The relatively mild embryonic phenotype could be due to the buffering effects of maternally deposited WT her9 mRNA. Nevertheless, by 5 dpf the mutants have not developed a swim bladder, display craniofacial and gastrointestinal defects, darker pigmentation, and abnormal swimming patterns. The her9 mutants do not survive past 12 dpf, which may be due to problems with feeding and digestion.
One of the most striking phenotypes in the her9 mutant consists of a significant decrease in rod and double cone photoreceptors, which is associated with elevated levels of apoptosis in the ONL and abnormal outer segments in the surviving rods and red/green cones. Intriguingly, this defect does not seem to affect the short wavelength (blue and UV) photoreceptor subtypes. The rod-cone dystrophy observed in her9 mutants suggests that Her9 is required for rod and cone maintenance and survival. The degeneration of the rod photoreceptors seems more severe than the cones, supporting a rod-cone progression in degeneration. Given that we did not observe expression of her9 in mature photoreceptors, this suggests that Her9 acts non-cell autonomously to maintain rods and double cones. Follow-up transplantation experiments could help to resolve this question. It is unlikely that the RPE contributes to the photoreceptor phenotypes, since we did not observe her9 expression in the RPE, nor were there any obvious RPE structural defects in her9 mutants. One possibility is that one of the functions of Her9 in the peripheral retina is to influence gradients of retinoic acid or thyroid hormone signaling, which are known to be important for photoreceptor maintenance (see below). In any case, the reduced number of cones and abnormal outer segments could explain the lack of VBA and OKR responses in the her9 mutants, although we cannot rule out the possibility that the absent OKR response is due to defects in other tissues outside the retina. Given that we observed a significant decrease in rod and cone opsin expression, it is also possible that other phototransduction proteins are downregulated as well. Future electrophysiological and ultrastructural studies could help to resolve the functional consequences of Her9 loss to the photoreceptor outer segments.
The process of photoreceptor development has been extensively studied and important transcription factors that regulate photoreceptor specification have been identified, such as Crx, Nr2e3, and thrβ, among many others. In our investigations of whether Her9 is required for rod and/or cone lineage specification, we saw no significant changes in crx expression in her9 mutant retinas, indicating that Her9 is not required at this stage of photoreceptor specification. However, we did observe a significant decrease in expression of Nr2e3 and thrβ in her9 mutants, indicating that Her9 may be required for the specification of some photoreceptor subtypes once progenitors have chosen a specific photoreceptor lineage.
The reduction in thrβ expression in her9 mutants may contribute to additional phenotypes outside of the retina. Lui and Chan37 showed that thyroid hormones are important for the embryonic to larval transition in zebrafish. Inhibition of Thrβ produced a missing swim bladder, defects in the gastrointestinal tract, and craniofacial defects. These phenotypes resemble those observed in the her9 mutants where we also see a loss of swim bladder, gastrointestinal tract defects, and craniofacial abnormalities in addition to the photoreceptor defects. Furthermore, given that there is a direct link between thrβ expression and cone development and differentiation38, our data suggest that Her9 could be directly or indirectly required for thrβ expression. This theory could be tested by exposing mutant embryos to L- thyroxine (T4) and 3,5,3′-l-triiodothyronine (T3) to see whether we can rescue any components of the her9 mutant phenotype.
In addition to decreases in photoreceptors, we also observed significant decreases in the number of Müller glia, ganglion cells, and in proliferating cells in the CMZ of her9 mutants. Investigation into the role of Her9/Hes4 in both Medaka and Xenopus have demonstrated expression of her9 in the CMZ of the developing and post-embryonic retina14,17. Consistent with those data, we also observed the expression of her9 localized to the CMZ starting at 36 hpf. We observed a significant decrease in the proliferating cells of the CMZ of her9 mutants that became more severe over time. This indicates that Her9 is required for the maintenance of proliferating retinal progenitor cells. Morpholino knockdown of Hes4 in Xenopus produced dose-dependent eye defects from small eyes to animals with no eyes at all14. In our zebrafish her9 mutants, we observed a variable degree of microphthalmia but never complete loss of eyes. This difference in phenotypic severity could be due to species-specific requirements for Her9 during oculogenesis, or to differences in experimental approach. In addition to a decrease in retinal cells, previous studies in Xenopus have shown that the loss of Hes4 leads to a significant increase in apoptosis in the retina39–41. In our model, we also observe a significant increase in apoptosis in the retina and brain of our her9 mutant which leads us to conclude that Her9 plays a role in cellular proliferation early on in retinal development and then cell survival later.
Radosevic et al.9 demonstrated that Her9 is downstream of the Retinoic acid (RA) signaling pathway in the neural patterning that underlies the development of the otic vesicle. With these data in mind, we wanted to determine whether Her9 is also downstream of RA signaling in the developing retina. Accordingly, we observed an increase in her9 expression in the retina following exogenous treatment with RA, and blocking RA signaling with DEAB resulted in a decrease in her9 expression. These data demonstrate that her9 expression is regulated by RA signaling in the developing zebrafish retina. Taken together with the outer segment defects and decreased opsin expression in her9 mutants, as well as previous studies demonstrating that opsin expression is regulated by RA signaling29–31, we hypothesized that loss of Her9 was directly disrupting opsin expression downstream of RA signaling. However, when we exposed her9 mutants to exogenous RA, we observed similar modulations in opsin expression to those observed on their WT siblings. This suggests that Her9 is not acting directly on opsin expression and may instead be acting downstream of RA to indirectly regulate photoreceptor differentiation and opsin expression. Future studies will include determining whether Her9 is interacting with other components of the RA pathway such as retinoic acid receptors, retinoid X receptors, or retinoic acid synthesis or degradation enzymes, some of which are expressed in the peripheral retina similarly to her9.
In summary, we have characterized a novel role for Her9 in photoreceptor development, maintenance, outer segment morphology and opsin expression, as well as Müller glial development. Given that the her9 mutant displays such significant defects in rod and cone photoreceptors our results implicate Her9/HES4 as an important component of the gene regulatory network that regulates photoreceptor differentiation and survival. Further experiments such as cell lineage tracing are needed to resolve how much each component (cell differentiation, maintenance, and survival) contributes to the retinal phenotypes observed in her9 mutants. Future studies of Her9/HES4 could add to our understanding of its role in regulating retinal stem cell proliferation at the ciliary margin and determine how its loss leads to photoreceptor degeneration.
Materials and methods
Zebrafish lines and maintenance
All zebrafish lines were bred, housed, and maintained at 28.5 °C on a 14 h light: 10-h dark cycle, in accordance with established protocols for zebrafish husbandry42. The Tg(3.2TαC: EGFP) transgenic line (hereafter called TαC:EGFP) has been previously described24, and was generously provided by Susan Brockerhoff (University of Washington, Seattle, WA). The Tg(gfap: GFP)mi2001 line (hereafter referred to as GFAP:GFP), was previously described43 and was obtained from the Zebrafish International Resource Center (ZIRC, Eugene, OR). The Tg(XlRho: EGFP) transgenic line (hereafter called XOPs:GFP) has been previously described23, and was obtained from James Fadool (Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL). The Tg(fli1a: EGFP)y1Tg transgenic line, (hereafter called fli1:GFP) has been previously described44, and was obtained from ZIRC. The Tg(atoh7:GFP) transgenic line, (hereafter called ath5:GFP) has been previously described26 and was obtained from ZIRC. Embryos were anesthetized with Ethyl 3-aminobenzoate methanesulfonate salt (MS-222, Tricaine, Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) and adults were euthanized by rapid cooling as previously described45. All animal procedures and experimental protocols were approved and carried out in accordance with guidelines established by the University of Kentucky Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC), the University of Kentucky Institutional Biosafety Committee, and the ARVO Statement for the Use of Animals in Ophthalmic and Vision Research.
Generation of her9 mutant zebrafish by CRISPR
The her9 target sites and single strand DNA oligonucleotides used to generate the guide RNAs were selected using the ZiFit online tool (https://zifit.partners.org/ZiFiT/). The target sites for CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing were selected within the first and third exons of the her9 gene. The first target site is 54 bp 3′ of the translation start site and 46 bp upstream of the beginning of the bHLH domain, while the second target site is immediately after the region corresponding to the Orange domain (sequences listed in Supplemental Table 2).
The pT3TS-nls-zCas9-nls (Addgene: 46757) expression vector was used to produce Cas9 mRNA. This vector contains a zebrafish codon-optimized Cas9 coding sequence flanked by the nuclear localization sequence. The plasmid was linearized using XbaI (NEB: R0145S) and purified by phenol:chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation. Cas9 mRNA was generated using Ambion mMESSAGE mMACHINE T3 Transcription Kit (Life Technologies: AM1304) and purified by phenol:chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation.
Screening for mutations in her9 was performed by high resolution melting analysis (HRMA). Genomic DNA was collected from 24 hpf embryos as described below. HRMA was performed using the LightCycler 480 High-Resolution Melting Master (Roche) kit according to the manufacturer's instructions on a LightCycler 96 Real-Time PCR System (Roche).
Genomic DNA (gDNA) extraction and amplification
gDNA was extracted from whole embryos or from tail clips of adult fish. The embryos or tails were placed in 20 µl of 1 × Thermopol buffer (NEB, Ipswich, MA) and incubated at 95°C to soften the tissue. The tissue was cooled on ice for 10 min before 5 µl of Proteinase K (Pro K; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) was added to each and incubated at 55°C overnight. After at least 18 h of digestion, tubes containing the digested tissue were incubated at 95º C for 15 min to deactivate the Pro K. The gDNA was then amplified using primers described in Supplemental Table 1.
Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis
The mutant her9 allele carrying a 1 bp deletion was identified by RFLP analysis due to the introduction of a BsaJI restriction site (NEB: R0563S). The mutant her9 allele carrying a 1 bp insertion was identified by RFLP due to the introduction of a BfaI restriction site (NEB: R0568S). Genomic DNA from whole embryos or from tail clips was extracted and amplified by PCR as described above, then subjected to restriction digest. The restriction digests were visualized on a 2% agarose gel.
mRNA synthesis and microinjections
The coding region of her9 was amplified by RT-PCR and the cDNA was cloned into a pGEMT-easy plasmid (Promega, Madison, WI). Capped mRNA was synthesized using the mMessage T7 kit (Ambion, Austin, TX) according to the manufacturer's instructions and purified by phenol–chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation. The mRNA was injected at a volume of 4.18 nl/embryo (1.5 ng) in buffered solution with 0.025% Dextran red into the yolk of 1-cell stage zebrafish.
Western blot analysis
Protein lysate was extracted from 20 heads of 3 dpf her9 wildtype and mutant larvae. Protein was quantified by Bradford Assay (BIO-Rad), and 30 μg was diluted 1:3 in gel loading buffer (NEB), sonicated, spun down, then separated by SDS-PAGE on Mini-PROTEAN TGX Precast Gels (BIO-Rad). Following gel electrophoresis, separated proteins were transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane. The membrane was blocked with 5% non-fat milk/PBST for 30 min at room temperature then incubated in anti-human HES4 (rabbit polyclonal, 1:500, Thermo Fisher) or anti-β actin (mouse monoclonal, 1:1,000, Santa Cruz)/PBST solution overnight at 4 °C. Membranes were washed in PBST then incubated in secondary antibody for one hour at room temperature, developed with HRP Development Reagent (BIO-Rad) for 1 min, and imaged with a Chemidoc Bioimager (BIO-Rad). The experiment was performed in duplicate, and similar results were obtained both times.
RNA isolation and riboprobe synthesis
RNA was isolated from whole embryos at indicated developmental time points. RNA was extracted from pools of embryos using TRIzol Reagent (Life Technologies, Invitrogen), following the manufacturer’s protocol, then treated with RNAse-Free DNAse I (Roche, Indianapolis, IN) to remove genomic DNA as previously described46. For riboprobes, PCR products from the unique regions of her9 were cloned into the pGEMT-easy vector (Promega, Madison, WI). Plasmids were linearized using either NcoI and SpeI restriction enzymes (NEB, Ipswich, MA). Riboprobes were synthesized from the plasmids by in vitro transcription using either T7 or Sp6 polymerase and a digoxigenin (DIG) labeling kit (Roche Applied Science, Indianapolis, IN). The primer sequences used for riboprobe preparation are given in Supplemental Table 1.
RT-PCR and real-time quantitative RT-PCR (qPCR)
The GoScript Reverse Transcriptase System (Promega, Madison, WI) was used to synthesize the first strand cDNA from 1 μg of the extracted RNA. PCR primers were designed to amplify unique regions of the her9 and atp5h cDNAs (Eurofins Genomics; www.eurofinsgenomics.com; Supplemental Table 1). Faststart Essential DNA Green Master mix (Roche) was used to perform qPCR on a Lightcycler 96 Real-Time PCR System (Roche). The relative transcript abundance was normalized to atp5h expression as the housekeeping gene control47, and was calculated as fold-change relative to 36 h post fertilization (hpf) for developmental expression, and fold-change relative to wild type siblings, untreated, or uninjected embryos for the mRNA rescue and RA experiments. RT-PCR and qPCR experiments were performed with three biological replicates and three technical replicates. RT-PCR was performed on a Mastercycler Pro thermocycler (Eppendorf, Westbury, NY). PCR products were visualized on a 1% agarose gel.
Visually mediated background adaptation assay (VBA assay)
The VBA assay was adapted from previously described protocols19,20. Embryos at 5 dpf were incubated in the dark for 2 h and the dorsal cranial pigment was immediately imaged after removal from the dark. The embryos were then placed under ambient light for 30 min. The dorsal cranial pigment was imaged immediately following light exposure. Images of the heads of the embryos were scored by naïve observers as either "Light" or "Dark". All imaged embryos were then genotyped by RFLP analysis. The assay was performed a minimum of three times. In each assay, 10 embryos were screened. Results were analyzed by χ2 test.
Optokinetic response assay (OKR assay)
Embryos were collected at 5 dpf and mounted in a 35-mm petri dish filled with 5% methylcellulose. The embryos were mounted near the surface of the methylcellulose, dorsal side up. The petri dish was then placed inside of a rotating drum containing illuminated vertical stripes. The drum was rotated clockwise for 30 seconds at 8 rpm then 30 seconds counterclockwise at 8 rpm and finally clockwise for another 30 seconds. Embryos were scored "responders" if they displayed smooth saccade eye movements in response to the drum rotation in the direction of rotation for at least two of the 30 second intervals. Embryos were scored as “non-responders” if they displayed no eye movement in any of the 30 second intervals. After scoring, the embryos were collected in 1 × Thermopol buffer for gDNA extraction and genotyping using RFLP analysis as described above. The OKR assay was performed a minimum of three times, and at least 10 embryos were scored each time.
Mobility assay
Single 5 dpf zebrafish larvae were filmed for 1 min in a 96-well plate to assess their swimming behavior. Each larva was subsequently screened for the her9 1 bp insertion via PCR amplification and a restriction digest with BfaI (NEB: R0568S). The videos were linked to the appropriate genotype and analyzed using EthoVision software (www.noldus.com/animal-behavior-research/products/ethovision-xt). EthoVision analysis produced individual tracks for each larva, a compiled heat map of movement by genotype, and comparisons of total velocity and distance traveled.
Whole-mount and fluorescent in situ hybridization (WISH and FISH)
Embryos were manually dechorionated, collected at selected developmental time points (18, 24, 48, 72, and 120 hpf) and fixed as described above. WISH was performed as previously described48. Solutions were prepared with diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEPC)-treated water. DIG-labeled riboprobes (3 ng/μl) were hybridized to the samples overnight at 60 °C in hybridization buffer. After washing and blocking, samples were incubated overnight at 4 °C with an anti-DIG-AP antibody (Roche, diluted 1:2,000 in blocking solution). The next day, the embryos were washed and equilibrated in NTMT buffer followed by coloration with 4-nitro blue tetrazolium (NBT, Roche) and 5-Bromo-4chloro-3-indolyl-phosphate, 4-toluidine salt (BCIP, Roche) in NTMT buffer. A stop solution (PBS pH 5.5, 1 mM EDTA) was used to end the coloration reaction and embryos were placed in 40% glycerol for imaging.
FISH was performed as previously described49. Embryos were fixed and sectioned as previously described48. Sections were post-fixed in 1% PFA and rehydrated in PBST. The TSA plus Cy3 Kit (Perkin Elmer Inc, Waltham, MA) was used for probe detection. The sections were counterstained with 4′, 6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI, 1:10,000 dilution, Sigma-Aldrich), mounted in 60% glycerol, and imaged on an inverted fluorescent microscope (Nikon Eclipse Ti-U, Nikon Instruments, Melville, NY) using a 20 × or 40 × objective and a Leica SP8 DLS confocal/digital light sheet system (Leica Biosystems, Nussloch, Germany) using a 40 × or 63 × objective. At least 10 embryos and 10 sections were analyzed for each time point and probe.
Immunohistochemistry
Immunohistochemistry was performed as previously described50. The following primary antibodies were used: 4C12 (mouse, 1:100) generously provided by J. Fadool (Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL), which labels rod photoreceptor cell bodies; 1D1 (mouse, 1:100, J. Fadool, FSU, Tallahassee, FL), which recognizes rhodopsin; Zpr-1 (mouse, 1:20, ZIRC), which labels red-green double cones; HuC/D (mouse, 1:20, Invitrogen, Grand Island, NY), which recognizes retinal ganglion cells and amacrine cells; Prox1 (rabbit, 1:2,000, Millipore, Billerica, MA), which recognizes horizontal cells; anti-PCNA (mouse, 1:100, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Dallas, TX), which labels proliferating cells; Zpr-3 (rabbit, 1:1,000, ZIRC), which labels double cone and rod photoreceptor outer segments; and anti-Blue, -green, and -UV Opsin (rabbit, 1:1,000), generously provided by D. Hyde (University of Notre Dame) which labels the blue, green, and UV cones, respectively. Alexa Fluor 488 goat anti-mouse, 488 goat anti-rabbit, 546 goat anti-rabbit, and 546 goat anti-mouse secondary antibodies (Molecular Probes, Invitrogen) were all used at 1:200 dilution. Nuclei were visualized by counterstaining with DAPI (1:10,000 dilution). Samples were mounted in 60% glycerol in PBS. Images were taken at 20 × and 40 × on an inverted fluorescent microscope and a Leica SP8 DLS confocal/digital light sheet system using a 40 × or 63 × objective. Ten sections were analyzed on each slide and for each antibody.
TUNEL staining
Terminal deoxynucleotide transferase (TdT)-mediated dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) was performed on frozen retinal cryosections using the ApopTag Fluorescein Direct In Situ Apoptosis Detection Kit (Millipore, Billerica, MA). TUNEL staining was performed according to the manufacturer's protocol. Images were taken at 20 × and 40 × on an inverted fluorescent microscope (Eclipse Ti-U, Nikon instruments). Ten sections were analyzed on each slide.
RA treatment
Stocks of all-trans-RA in dimethyl-sulfoxide (DMSO) were thawed before use and diluted to 1 µM retinoic acid with 0.3% DMSO in embryo medium, 100 µM of the RA signaling inhibitor diethylaminobenzaldehyde (DEAB) in 0.3% DMSO in embryo medium or 0.3% DMSO alone as the carrier control. Fli1:EGFP embryos and embryos from her9 heterozygous incrosses were immersed in the RA solution starting at 24 hpf and were incubated for 12 h in complete darkness. At 36 hpf the embryos were rinsed in artificial fish water for 10 min and processed for immunohistochemistry, or the heads were removed and processed for qPCR.
To observe effects of RA on rod and cone photoreceptors, embryos from wild type or her9 heterozygous incrosses were incubated in 0.3 μM RA solution starting at 48 hpf and the solution was refreshed every 24 hpf. The embryos were collected at 72 hpf for analysis of rods, and at 120 hpf for analysis of cones. The heads were removed and sectioned for IHC and imaging.
Cell counts
For comparing and counting retinal cells, only retinal cryosections containing the optic nerve as a landmark were used for cell counts. For photoreceptor and horizontal cells, counts were taken from a 100 µm region of the outer retina, beginning 100 μm dorsal to the optic nerve. For Müller glia, ganglion and amacrine cells, counts were taken from a 100 µm region directly adjacent to the optic nerve. For each experiment, sections were counted from a minimum of 10 wild-type, heterozygous or mutant embryos.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using a Student’s t-test or χ2 test with GraphPad Prism software (www.graphpad.com). For comparing the number of retinal cell types and other phenotypic features 10 wild type and 10 mutant animals were examined. Boxplot graphs were prepared using ggplot2 in R (version 3.6.2; https://www.R-project.org/). All graph data are represented as the mean ± the standard deviation (s.d.).
Supplementary information
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Lucas Vieira Francisco for excellent zebrafish care. We also thank Dr. David Hyde (University of Notre Dame) for generously providing the zebrafish opsin antibodies. This work was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (R01EY021769, to A.C.M.) and the University of Kentucky Lyman T. Johnson graduate fellowship (to C.E.C).
Author contributions
C.E.C. and A.C.M. Conceived and designed the experiments and wrote the manuscript. C.E.C., S.G.W., K.F.T., J.D.B., L.A.K., R.A.P., E.M.T., and E.L.J. performed the experiments. C.E.C., S.G.W., K.F.T., J.D.B., L.A.K., R.A.P., and A.C.M. prepared the figures. All authors reviewed the manuscript.
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Footnotes
Publisher's note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Change history
9/4/2020
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
Supplementary information
is available for this paper at 10.1038/s41598-020-68172-2.
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