Proposed therapy, developed in a Pcdh15-deficient mouse, for progressive loss of vision in human Usher syndrome.
Saumil SethnaWadih M ZeinSehar RiazArnaud Pj GieseJulie M SchultzTodd DuncanRobert B HufnagelCarmen C BrewerAndrew J GriffithT Michael RedmondSaima RiazuddinThomas B FriedmanZubair M AhmedPublished in: eLife (2021)
Usher syndrome type I (USH1) is characterized by deafness, vestibular areflexia, and progressive retinal degeneration. The protein-truncating p.Arg245* founder variant of PCDH15 (USH1F) has an ~2% carrier frequency amongst Ashkenazi Jews accounts for ~60% of their USH1 cases. Here, longitudinal phenotyping in 13 USH1F individuals revealed progressive retinal degeneration, leading to severe vision loss with macular atrophy by the sixth decade. Half of the affected individuals were legally blind by their mid-50s. The mouse Pcdh15R250X variant is equivalent to human p.Arg245*. Homozygous Pcdh15R250X mice also have visual deficits and aberrant light-dependent translocation of the phototransduction cascade proteins, arrestin, and transducin. Retinal pigment epithelium (RPE)-specific retinoid cycle proteins, RPE65 and CRALBP, were also reduced in Pcdh15R250X mice, indicating a dual role for protocadherin-15 in photoreceptors and RPE. Exogenous 9-cis retinal improved ERG amplitudes in Pcdh15R250X mice, suggesting a basis for a clinical trial of FDA-approved retinoids to preserve vision in USH1F patients.
Keyphrases
- optical coherence tomography
- diabetic retinopathy
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- endothelial cells
- high fat diet induced
- clinical trial
- ejection fraction
- end stage renal disease
- wild type
- optic nerve
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- newly diagnosed
- traumatic brain injury
- high throughput
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- randomized controlled trial
- cross sectional
- drug induced
- skeletal muscle
- protein protein
- cell therapy
- double blind
- patient reported outcomes
- open label
- bone marrow