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Publication : Non-cell-autonomous photoreceptor degeneration in rds mutant mice mosaic for expression of a rescue transgene.

First Author  Kedzierski W Year  1998
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  18
Issue  11 Pages  4076-82
PubMed ID  9592088 Mgi Jnum  J:48233
Mgi Id  MGI:1266999 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.18-11-04076.1998
Citation  Kedzierski W, et al. (1998) Non-cell-autonomous photoreceptor degeneration in rds mutant mice mosaic for expression of a rescue transgene. J Neurosci 18(11):4076-82
abstractText  The inherited retinal dystrophies represent a large and heterogeneous group of hereditary neurodegenerations, for many of which, the molecular defect has been defined. However, the mechanism of cell death has not been determined for any form of retinal degeneration. The retinal degeneration slow (rds-/-) mutation of mice is associated with nondevelopment of photoreceptor outer segments and gradual death of photoreceptor cell bodies, attributed to the absence of the outer segment protein rds/ peripherin. Here, we examined the effects of a transgene encoding normal rds/peripherin that had integrated into the X-chromosome in male and female rds-/-mutant retinas. In 2-month-oId transgenic males and homozygous-transgenic females on rds-/-, we observed virtually complete rescue of both the outer segment nondevelopment and photoreceptor degeneration. In contrast, hemizygous-transgenic rds-/- female littermates showed patchy distributions of the transgene mRNA, by in situ hybridization analysis, and of photoreceptor cells that contain outer segments. This pattern is consistent with random inactivation of the X- chromosome and mosaic expression of the transgene. Surprisingly, we observed significant photoreceptor cell loss in both transgene-expressing and nonexpressing patches in hemizygous female retinas. These observations were supported by nuclease protection analysis, which showed notably lower than predicted levels of transgene mRNA in retinas from hemizygous females compared with male and homozygous female littermates. This phenotype suggests an important component of non-cell-autonomous photoreceptor death in rds-/- mutant mice. These results have significance to both the etiology and potential treatment of human inherited retinal degenerations.
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