Induction of Neuronal Morphology in the 661W Cone Photoreceptor Cell Line with Staurosporine.

PubMed ID: 26684837

Author(s): Thompson AF, Crowe ME, Lieven CJ, Levin LA. Induction of neuronal morphology in the 661W cone photoreceptor cell line with staurosporine. PLoS One. 2015 Dec 18;10(12):e0145270. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0145270. eCollection 2015. PMID 26684837

Journal: Plo S One, Volume 10, Issue 12, 2015

PURPOSE RGC-5 cells undergo differentiation into a neuronal phenotype with low concentrations of staurosporine. Although the RGC-5 cell line was initially thought to be of retinal ganglion cell origin, recent evidence suggests that the RGC-5 line could have been the result of contamination with 661W mouse cone photoreceptor cells. This raised the possibility that a cone photoreceptor cell line could be multipotent and could be differentiated to a neuronal phenotype.

METHODS 661W and RGC-5 cells, non-neuronal retinal astrocytes, retinal endothelial cells, retinal pericytes, M21 melanoma cells, K562 chronic myelogenous leukemia cells, and Daudi Burkitt lymphoma cells, were differentiated with staurosporine. The resulting morphology was quantitated using NeuronJ with respect to neurite counts and topology.

RESULTS Treatment with staurosporine induced similar-appearing morphological differentiation in both 661W and RGC-5 cells. The following measures were not significantly different between 661W and RGC-5 cells: number of neurites per cell, total neurite field length, number of neurite branch points, and cell viability. Neuronal-like differentiation was not observed in the other cell lines tested.

CONCLUSIONS 661W and RGC-5 cells have virtually identical and distinctive morphology when differentiated with low concentrations of staurosporine. This result demonstrates that a retinal neuronal precursor cell with cone photoreceptor lineage can be differentiated to express a neuronal morphology.