Evolutionary adaptation to diurnal vision in ground squirrels has led to the development of a cone-dominant retina, in stark contrast to the rod-dominant retinas of most mammals. The molecular mechanisms driving this shift remain largely unexplored. Here, we perform single-cell RNA sequencing and chromatin accessibility profiling (scATAC-Seq) across developmental retinal neurogenesis in the 13-lined ground squirrel (13LGS) to uncover the regulatory basis of this adaptation. We find that 13LGS cone photoreceptors arise not only from early-stage neurogenic progenitors, as seen in rod-dominant species like mice, but also from late-stage neurogenic progenitors. This extended period of cone generation is driven by a heterochronic shift in transcription factor expression, with cone-promoting factors such as Onecut2, Pou2f1, and Zic3 remaining active in late-stage progenitors, and factors that promote cone differentiation such as Thrb, Rxrg, and Mef2c expressed precociously in late-stage neurogenic progenitors. Functional analyses reveal that Zic3 and Mef2c are sufficient to promote cone and repress rod photoreceptor-specific gene expression and act through species-specific regulatory elements that drive their expression in late-stage progenitors. These results demonstrate that modifications to gene regulatory networks underlie the development of cone-dominant retinas and provide insight into mechanisms of sensory adaptation and potential strategies for cone photoreceptor regeneration in vision disorders.
Heterochronic transcription factor expression drives cone-dominant retina development in 13-lined ground squirrels.
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作者:Weir Kurt, Lyu Pin, Kandoi Sangeetha, An Roujin, Pannullo Nicole, Palazzo Isabella, Tangeman Jared A, Shi Jun, DeVries Steven H, Merriman Dana K, Qian Jiang, Blackshaw Seth
| 期刊: | Elife | 影响因子: | 6.400 |
| 时间: | 2026 | 起止号: | 2026 Feb 6; 14:RP108485 |
| doi: | 10.7554/eLife.108485 | ||
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