Abstract

A variety of rod opsin mutations result in autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa and congenital night blindness in humans. One subset of these mutations encodes constitutively active forms of the rod opsin protein. Some of these dominant rod opsin mutant proteins, which desensitize transgenic Xenopus rods, provide an animal model for congenital night blindness. In a genetic screen to identify retinal degeneration mutants in Drosophila, we identified a dominant mutation in the ninaE gene (NinaE(pp100)) that encodes the rhodopsin that is expressed in photoreceptors R1-R6. Deep pseudopupil analysis and histology showed that the degeneration was attributable to a light-independent apoptosis. Whole-cell recordings revealed that the NinaE(pp100) mutant photoreceptor cells were strongly desensitized, which partially masked their constitutive activity. This desensitization primarily resulted from both the persistent binding of arrestin (ARR2) to the NINAE(pp100) mutant opsin and the constitutive activity of the phototransduction cascade. Whereas mutations in several Drosophila genes other than ninaE were shown to induce photoreceptor cell apoptosis by stabilizing a rhodopsin-arrestin complex, NinaE(pp100) represented the first rhodopsin mutation that stabilized this protein complex. Additionally, the NinaE(pp100) mutation led to elevated levels of G(q)alpha in the cytosol, which mediated a novel retinal degeneration pathway. Eliminating both G(q)alpha and arrestin completely rescued the NinaE(pp100)-dependent photoreceptor cell death, which indicated that the degeneration is entirely dependent on both G(q)alpha and arrestin. Such a combination of multiple pathological pathways resulting from a single mutation may underlie several dominant retinal diseases in humans.

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