Editorial
Copyright ©2012 Baishideng. All rights reserved.
World J Stem Cells. Aug 26, 2012; 4(8): 80-86
Published online Aug 26, 2012. doi: 10.4252/wjsc.v4.i8.80
Shaping the eye from embryonic stem cells: Biological and medical implications
Gabriele Colozza, Morgane Locker, Muriel Perron
Gabriele Colozza, Morgane Locker, Muriel Perron, Laboratory of Neurobiology and Development, UPR CNRS 3294, University Paris-Sud, 91405 ORSAY Cedex, France
Gabriele Colozza, Howard Hughes Medical Institute University of California, Los Angeles, 5-748 MacDonald Research Laboratories (MRL), 675 Charles E. Young Drive, South Los Angeles, CA 90095-1662, United States
Author contributions: Colozza G wrote the first draft of the manuscript; Locker M and Perron M revised the manuscript.
Correspondence to: Muriel Perron, PhD, Laboratory of Neurobiology and Development, CNRS UPR 3294, Institute of Neurobiology A. Fessard, Bât. 445, University Paris-Sud, 91405 ORSAY Cedex, France. muriel.perron@u-psud.fr
Telephone: +33-1-69157225 Fax: +33-1-69156802
Received: October 31, 2011
Revised: August 20, 2012
Accepted: August 22, 2012
Published online: August 26, 2012
Abstract

Organogenesis is regulated by a complex network of intrinsic cues, diffusible signals and cell/cell or cell/matrix interactions that drive the cells of a prospective organ to differentiate and collectively organize in three dimensions. Generating organs in vitro from embryonic stem (ES) cells may provide a simplified system to decipher how these processes are orchestrated in time and space within particular and between neighboring tissues. Recently, this field of stem cell research has also gained considerable interest for its potential applications in regenerative medicine. Among human pathologies for which stem cell-based therapy is foreseen as a promising therapeutic strategy are many retinal degenerative diseases, like retinitis pigmentosa and age-related macular degeneration. Over the last decade, progress has been made in producing ES-derived retinal cells in vitro, but engineering entire synthetic retinas was considered beyond reach. Recently however, major breakthroughs have been achieved with pioneer works describing the extraordinary self-organization of murine and human ES cells into a three dimensional structure highly resembling a retina. ES-derived retinal cells indeed assemble to form a cohesive neuroepithelial sheet that is endowed with the intrinsic capacity to recapitulate, outside an embryonic environment, the main steps of retinal morphogenesis as observed in vivo. This represents a tremendous advance that should help resolving fundamental questions related to retinogenesis. Here, we will discuss these studies, and the potential applications of such stem cell-based systems for regenerative medicine.

Keywords: Retina; Optic cup; Embryonic stem cells; Retinal pigment epithelium; Three dimensional culture