Login / Signup

Dark noise and retinal degeneration from D190N-rhodopsin.

Daniel SilvermanZuying ChaiWendy W S YueSravani Keerthi RamisettySowmya Bekshe LokappaKazumi SakaiRikard FrederiksenParinaz BinaStephen H TsangTakahiro YamashitaJeannie ChenKing-Wai Yau
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2020)
Numerous rhodopsin mutations have been implicated in night blindness and retinal degeneration, often with unclear etiology. D190N-rhodopsin (D190N-Rho) is a well-known inherited human mutation causing retinitis pigmentosa. Both higher-than-normal spontaneous-isomerization activity and misfolding/mistargeting of the mutant protein have been proposed as causes of the disease, but neither explanation has been thoroughly examined. We replaced wild-type rhodopsin (WT-Rho) in Rho D190N/WT mouse rods with a largely "functionally silenced" rhodopsin mutant to isolate electrical responses triggered by D190N-Rho activity, and found that D190N-Rho at the single-molecule level indeed isomerizes more frequently than WT-Rho by over an order of magnitude. Importantly, however, this higher molecular dark activity does not translate into an overall higher cellular dark noise, owing to diminished D190N-Rho content in the rod outer segment. Separately, we found that much of the degeneration and shortened outer-segment length of Rho D190N/WT mouse rods was not averted by ablating rod transducin in phototransduction-also consistent with D190N-Rho's higher isomerization activity not being the primary cause of disease. Instead, the low pigment content, shortened outer-segment length, and a moderate unfolded protein response implicate protein misfolding as the major pathogenic problem. Finally, D190N-Rho also provided some insight into the mechanism of spontaneous pigment excitation.
Keyphrases
  • protein kinase
  • smooth muscle
  • single molecule
  • wild type
  • optical coherence tomography
  • air pollution
  • binding protein
  • amino acid
  • high intensity