First Author | Nir I | Year | 2000 |
Journal | Brain Res | Volume | 884 |
Issue | 1--2 | Pages | 13-22 |
PubMed ID | 11082482 | Mgi Jnum | J:66055 |
Mgi Id | MGI:1927920 | Doi | 10.1016/s0006-8993(00)02855-9 |
Citation | Nir I, et al. (2000) Diurnal metabolism of dopamine in dystrophic retinas of homozygous and heterozygous retinal degeneration slow (rds) mice. Brain Res 884(1-2):13-22 |
abstractText | Dopamine metabolism was studied in dystrophic retinal degeneration slow (rds) mice which carry a mutation in the rds/peripherin gene. RDS mutations in humans cause several forms of retinal degeneration. Dopamine synthesis and utilization were analyzed at various time points in the diurnal cycle in homozygous rds/rds retinas which lack photoreceptor outer segments and heterozygous rds/+ retinas which have short malformed outer segments. Homozygous retinas exhibited depressed dopamine synthesis and utilization while the heterozygous retina retained a considerable level of activity which was, nevertheless, significantly lower than that of normal retinas. By one year, heterozygous rds/+ retinas which had lost half of the photoreceptors still maintained significant levels of dopamine metabolism. Normal characteristics of dopamine metabolism such as a spike in dopamine utilization at light onset were observed in mutant retinas. However, light intensity-dependent changes in dopamine utilization were observed in normal but not rds/+ retinas. The findings of this study suggest that human patients with peripherin/rds mutations, or other mutations that result in abnormal outer segments that can still capture light, might maintain light-evoked dopamine metabolism and dopamine-dependent retinal functions during the progression of the disease, proportional to remaining levels of light capture capabilities. However, visual deficits due to reduced light-evoked dopamine metabolism and abnormal patterns of dopamine utilization could be expected in such diseased retinas. |