Abstract

Mutations in the centrosomal protein 290 (CEP290) gene cause various ciliopathies involving retinal degeneration. CEP290 proteins localize to the ciliary transition zone and are thought to act as a gatekeeper that controls ciliary protein trafficking. However, precise roles of CEP290 in photoreceptors and pathomechanisms of retinal degeneration in CEP290-associated ciliopathies are not sufficiently understood. Using conditional Cep290 mutant mice, in which the C-terminal myosin-tail homology domain of CEP290 is disrupted after the connecting cilium is assembled, we show that this domain is essential for protein confinement between the inner and the outer segments. Upon disruption of the myosin-tail homology domain, inner segment plasma membrane proteins, including syntaxin 3 (STX3), synaptosome-associated protein 25 (SNAP25), and interphotoreceptor matrix proteoglycan 2 (IMPG2), rapidly accumulated in the outer segment. In contrast, localization of endomembrane proteins was not altered. Trafficking and confinement of most outer segment-resident proteins appeared to be unaffected or only minimally affected in Cep290 mutant mice. One notable exception was rhodopsin (RHO), which severely mislocalized to inner segments during the initial stage of degeneration. Similar mislocalization phenotypes were observed in Cep290rd16 mice. These results suggest that a failure of protein confinement at the connecting cilium and consequent accumulation of inner segment membrane proteins in the outer segment, along with insufficient RHO delivery, is part of the disease mechanisms that cause retinal degeneration in CEP290-associated ciliopathies. Our study provides insights into the pathomechanisms of retinal degenerations associated with compromised ciliary gates.

Highlights

  • Mutations in the centrosomal protein 290 (CEP290) gene cause various ciliopathies involving retinal degeneration

  • These results suggest that a failure of protein confinement at the connecting cilium and consequent accumulation of inner segment membrane proteins in the outer segment, along with insufficient RHO delivery, is part of the disease mechanisms that cause retinal degeneration in CEP290-associated ciliopathies

  • Our study demonstrates that CEP290, the myosin-tail homology domain of CEP290, is essential for protein confinement between the inner and the outer segments and maintains compartmentalized protein localization in photoreceptors

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

Similar mislocalization phenotypes were observed in Cep290rd mice These results suggest that a failure of protein confinement at the connecting cilium and consequent accumulation of inner segment membrane proteins in the outer segment, along with insufficient RHO delivery, is part of the disease mechanisms that cause retinal degeneration in CEP290-associated ciliopathies. Partial loss of CEP290 function in rd mice, which have an in-frame deletion of exons 36 – 40 (based on reference sequence transcript NM_146009), allows formation of membrane-bound connecting cilia, but outer segments are rudimentary and severely malformed [15, 16, 24] These studies show that CEP290 is essential for outer segment biogenesis and, either directly or indirectly, is required for the trafficking of outer segment proteins. We examined (mis)trafficking of outer segment-resident proteins and various inner segment membrane proteins

Results
Discussion
Animal study approval
Immunofluorescence microscopy
Outer segment isolation and immunoblotting
Full Text
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