Abstract

Most of inherited retinal diseases such as retinitis pigmentosa (RP) cause photoreceptor cell death resulting in blindness. RP is a large family of diseases in which the photoreceptor cell death can be caused by a number of pathways. Among them, light exposure has been reported to induce photoreceptor cell death. However, the detailed mechanism by which photoreceptor cell death is caused by light exposure is unclear. In this study, we have shown that even a mild light exposure can induce ectopic phototransduction and result in the acceleration of rod photoreceptor cell death in some vertebrate models. In ovl, a zebrafish model of outer segment deficiency, photoreceptor cell death is associated with light exposure. The ovl larvae show ectopic accumulation of rhodopsin and knockdown of ectopic rhodopsin and transducin rescue rod photoreceptor cell death. However, knockdown of phosphodiesterase, the enzyme that mediates the next step of phototransduction, does not. So, ectopic phototransduction activated by light exposure, which leads to rod photoreceptor cell death, is through the action of transducin. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that forced activation of adenylyl cyclase in the inner segment leads to rod photoreceptor cell death. For further confirmation, we have also generated a transgenic fish which possesses a human rhodopsin mutation, Q344X. This fish and rd10 model mice show photoreceptor cell death caused by adenylyl cyclase. In short, our study indicates that in some RP, adenylyl cyclase is involved in photoreceptor cell death pathway; its inhibition is potentially a logical approach for a novel RP therapy.

Highlights

  • Retinitis pigmentosa (RP, MIM 26800) is a common group of inherited retinal diseases that lead to blindness

  • Light exposure accelerates rod photoreceptor cell death To investigate the relationship between photoreceptor cell death and phototransduction, we assessed whether the photoreceptor cell death in ovl is accelerated by phototransduction

  • retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a slow progressive disease and most patients are concerned about light exposure accelerating the progression of the disease

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Summary

Introduction

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP, MIM 26800) is a common group of inherited retinal diseases that lead to blindness. Patients first suffer from peripheral visual field loss because of peripheral rod photoreceptor cell death. Photoreceptor cell death gradually but steadily progresses until patients lose central visual function, which degrades quality of life. Such slow progressive photoreceptor cell death is a prominent feature of RP. More than 45 responsible genes have been identified, the detailed mechanism of progressive photoreceptor cell death is still entirely unknown (RetNet, http://www.sph.uth.tmc.edu/retnet/), [3,4,5,6,7]. A set of cilium genes are thought to be responsible for Bardet–Biedl syndrome (BBS, MIM 209900), a systemic syndrome that includes RP and kidney cysts [8,9,10,11,12,13]. It’s mutation causes mislocalized visual pigment and cilia dysfunction, leading to the loss of outer segments [14]

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