Transcriptional downregulation of rhodopsin is associated with desensitization of rods to light-induced damage in a murine model of retinitis pigmentosa.
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Class I rhodopsin mutations are known for some of the most severe forms of vision impairments in dominantly inherited rhodopsin retinitis pigmentosa. They disrupt the VxPx transport signal, which is required for the proper localization of rhodopsin to the outer segments. While various studies have focused on the light-dependent toxicity of mutant rhodopsin, it remains unclear whether and how these mutations exert dominant-negative effects. Using the class I RhoQ344X rhodopsin knock-in mouse model, we characterized the expression of rhodopsin and other genes by RNA sequencing and qPCR. Those studies indicated that rhodopsin is the most prominently downregulated photoreceptor-specific gene in RhoQ344X/+ mice. Rhodopsin mRNA is downregulated significantly prior to the onset of rod degeneration, whereas mRNA downregulation of other phototransduction components, transducinα, and Pde6α, occurs after the onset and correlate with the degree of rod cell loss. Those studies indicated that the mutant rhodopsin gene causes downregulation of wild-type rhodopsin, imposing a transcript-level dominant-negative effect. Moreover, it causes downregulation of the mutant mRNA itself, mitigating the toxicity. The transcript-level dominant effect was also observed in the major class II rhodopsin mutant model, RhoP23H/+ mice, in which mutant rhodopsin is prone to misfold. Potentially due to mitigated toxicity by reduced rhodopsin expression, RhoQ344X/+ mice did not exhibit light-dependent exacerbation of rod degeneration, even after continuous exposure of mice for 5 days at 3000 lux. Thus, this study describes a novel form of dominant-negative effect in inherited neurodegenerative disorders.
期刊介绍:
Human Molecular Genetics concentrates on full-length research papers covering a wide range of topics in all aspects of human molecular genetics. These include:
the molecular basis of human genetic disease
developmental genetics
cancer genetics
neurogenetics
chromosome and genome structure and function
therapy of genetic disease
stem cells in human genetic disease and therapy, including the application of iPS cells
genome-wide association studies
mouse and other models of human diseases
functional genomics
computational genomics
In addition, the journal also publishes research on other model systems for the analysis of genes, especially when there is an obvious relevance to human genetics.