Abstract

Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and mislocalization of improperly folded proteins have been shown to contribute to photoreceptor death in models of inherited retinal degenerative diseases. In particular, mice with cone cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channel deficiency, a model for achromatopsia, display both early-onset ER stress and opsin mistrafficking. By 2 weeks of age, these mice show elevated signaling from all three arms of the ER-stress pathway, and by 1 month, cone opsin is improperly distributed away from its normal outer segment location to other retinal layers. This work investigated the role of Ca2+-release channels in ER stress, protein mislocalization, and cone death in a mouse model of CNG-channel deficiency. We examined whether preservation of luminal Ca2+ stores through pharmacological and genetic suppression of ER Ca2+ efflux protects cones by attenuating ER stress. We demonstrated that the inhibition of ER Ca2+-efflux channels reduced all three arms of ER-stress signaling while improving opsin trafficking to cone outer segments and decreasing cone death by 20-35%. Cone-specific gene deletion of the inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor type I (IP3R1) also significantly increased cone density in the CNG-channel-deficient mice, suggesting that IP3R1 signaling contributes to Ca2+ homeostasis and cone survival. Consistent with the important contribution of organellar Ca2+ signaling in this achromatopsia mouse model, significant differences in dynamic intraorganellar Ca2+ levels were detected in CNG-channel-deficient cones. These results thus identify a novel molecular link between Ca2+ homeostasis and cone degeneration, thereby revealing novel therapeutic targets to preserve cones in inherited retinal degenerative diseases.

Highlights

  • Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and mislocalization of improperly folded proteins have been shown to contribute to photoreceptor death in models of inherited retinal degenerative diseases

  • We investigated whether cone photoreceptors expressed the isoform-specific ER Ca2ϩchannel protein, IP3R, and whether its expression level was altered in cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG)-channel-deficient cones

  • Prominent IP3R1 and IP3R3 mRNA expression was detected in Cnga3Ϫ/Ϫ;NrlϪ/Ϫ retinas, with both isoforms showing significant increases in mRNA expression at postnatal day 15 (P15) and postnatal day 30 (P30), with an ϳ2–3-fold increase of both isoforms relative to agematched NrlϪ/Ϫ controls (Fig. 1A)

Read more

Summary

Edited by Thomas Sollner

Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and mislocalization of improperly folded proteins have been shown to contribute to photoreceptor death in models of inherited retinal degenerative diseases. RyR appears to play less significant roles in mammalian cones [18, 19], IP3R1 was recently shown to be phosphorylated following selective removal of CNG-channel subunits [6] and linked to changes in cGMP-dependent protein kinase G (PKG) activation [20] These findings implicate ER Ca2ϩ channels in ER-stress-related cone death in CNG-channel deficiency; the contribution of ER Ca2ϩ release to cone ER-stress activation, protein mislocalization, and degeneration remains poorly understood. Cone-opsin localization to OS was significantly improved following treatment with IP3R inhibitors These results suggest that ER Ca2ϩ-channel activity plays a role in ER-stress activation and contributes to cone degeneration and opsin mislocalization in CNG-channel-deficient cones

Results
Discussion
Dilutions used in IBa or IFb labeling
Experimental procedures
Reverse primer
TUNEL assay
Scotopic and photopic ERG recordings
Statistical analysis
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call