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A spontaneous mutation in ADIPOR1 causes retinal degeneration in mice

Yang, Junzheng, Buchanan, Natasha, Lima, Erika, Banks, Angela, Sluch, Valentin M., Fan, Lin, Leehy, Barrett, Arellano, Ivana, Qiu, Yubin, Klokman, Garrett, Hanks, Shawn, Vrouvlianis, Joanna, Davis, Venessa, Wu, Rake, Danilack, Aaron and Rice, Dennis (2024) A spontaneous mutation in ADIPOR1 causes retinal degeneration in mice. bioRxiv ( https://www.biorxiv.org).

Abstract

Adiponectin receptor 1 (ADIPOR1) is a transmembrane protein necessary for normal anatomy and physiology in the retina. In a recent study of complement factor H knockout mice (Cfh-/-), our lab discovered a flecked retina phenotype and retinal thinning by fundus imaging and optical coherence tomography (OCT), respectively. The phenotype was observed in a subset (50%) of Cfh-/- mice. The thinning observed in vivo is due to an early degeneration of rod photoreceptors. This phenotype has not been reported in published studies of Cfh-/- mice. AdipoR1 knockout mice (AdipoR1-/-) and mice deficient in Membrane Frizzled Related Protein (MFRP) exhibit this phenotype, suggesting an involvement in the emergence of the retinal degeneration observed in a subset of Cfh-/- mice. Cfh and AdipoR1 are located in close proximity on mouse Chromosome 1 (Chr1) and a complementation cross between Cfh and AdipoR1 mice with retinal degeneration produced 100% progeny with retinal degeneration. Sequencing of the Cfh-/- mice revealed a c.841 C > T mutation in AdipoR1. Furthermore, one Cfh wildtype (of Cfh+/+) and 2 heterozygous (of Cfh+/-) mice exhibited retinal degeneration and were homozygous for the point mutation. The c.841 C > T mutation results in a proline to serine conversion at position 281 (P281S) in ADIPOR1. This residue is critical for ADIPOR1 open and closed conformations in the membrane. In silico modeling of candidate ADIPOR1 ligands, 11-cis-retinaldehyde and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), that are deficient in AdipoR1-/-, suggests that ADIPOR1 is involved in trafficking retinoids and fatty acids and their combined deficiency in the ADIPOR1 mutant retinas might explain the retinal degeneration phenotype.

Item Type: Article
Date Deposited: 02 Aug 2024 00:46
Last Modified: 02 Aug 2024 00:46
URI: https://oak.novartis.com/id/eprint/54210

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