4.7 Article

Disease mechanisms and neuroprotection by tauroursodeoxycholic acid in Rpgr knockout mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 234, Issue 10, Pages 18801-18812

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcp.28519

Keywords

microglia activation; neuroprotection; retinitis pigmentosa; RPGR; tauroursodeoxycholic acid

Funding

  1. Fight for Sight [1419/20]
  2. National Eye Research Centre [SAC037, SCIAD063]
  3. Rosetrees Trust [M160, M160-F1, M160-F2]
  4. Fight for Sight [1419/20] Funding Source: researchfish
  5. Rosetrees Trust [M160-F1, M160-F2] Funding Source: researchfish

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Mutations in theretinitis pigmentosaGTPase regulator (RPGR)gene are the predominant cause of retinitis pigmentosa. RPGR plays a critical role as a scaffold protein in the regulation of protein trafficking from the basal body to the axoneme, where the cargoes are transported to the outer segments (OSs) of photoreceptors. This trafficking process is controlled directly by intraflagellar transport complexes and regulated by the RPGR protein complex, although the precise mechanisms have yet to be defined. We used an Rpgr conditional knockout (cko) mouse model to investigate the disease mechanisms during retinal degeneration and to evaluate the protective effects of tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA). Rhodopsin, cone opsins and transducin were mislocalized in Rpgr cko photoreceptors, while localization of NPHP4 to connecting cilia was absent, suggesting that RPGR is required for ciliary protein trafficking. Microglia were activated in advance of retinal degeneration in Rpgr cko mouse retinas. TUDCA treatment suppressed microglial activation and inflammation and prevented photoreceptor degeneration in Rpgr cko mice. Our data demonstrated that TUDCA has therapeutic potential for RPGR-associated RP patients.

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