Low availability of choline in utero disrupts development and function of the retina

  • Trujillo-Gonzalez, I.
  • Friday, W.B.
  • Munson, C.A.
  • Bachleda, A.
  • Weiss, E.R.
  • Alam, N.M.
  • Sha, W.
  • Zeisel, S.H.
  • Surzenko, N.
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Publication date
January 2019
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons Inc.

Abstract

Adequate supply of choline, an essential nutrient, is necessary to support proper brain development. Whether prenatal choline availability plays a role in development of the visual system is currently unknown. In this study, we addressed the role of in utero choline supply for the development and later function of the retina in a mouse model. We lowered choline availability in the maternal diet during pregnancy and assessed proliferative and differentiation properties of retinal progenitor cells (RPCs) in the developing prenatal retina, as well as visual function in adult offspring. We report that low choline availability during retinogenesis leads to persistent retinal cytoarchitectural defects, ranging from focal lesions with displacement...

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