4.4 Article

Differential Aggregation Properties of Mutant Human and Bovine Rhodopsin

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 60, Issue 1, Pages 6-18

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.0c00733

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01EY021731, P30EY011373]
  2. Research to Prevent Blindness
  3. Cleveland Eye Bank Foundation
  4. Office of Research Infrastructure Programs (NIH-ORIP) Shared Instrumentation Grant [S10 OD016164]

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The study revealed that human and bovine P23H rhodopsin mutants have different aggregation properties and responses to pharmacological compounds, leading to different predictions on the severity of the phenotype and the benefit of the therapeutic compounds tested.
Rhodopsin is the light receptor required for the function and health of photoreceptor cells. Mutations in rhodopsin can cause misfolding and aggregation of the receptor, which leads to retinal degeneration. Bovine rhodopsin is often used as a model to understand the effect of pathogenic mutations in rhodopsin due to the abundance of structural information on the bovine form of the receptor. It is unclear whether or not the bovine rhodopsin template is adequate in predicting the effect of these mutations occurring in human retinal disease or in predicting the efficacy of therapeutic strategies. To better understand the extent to which bovine rhodopsin can serve as a model, human and bovine P23H rhodopsin mutants expressed heterologously in cells were examined. The aggregation properties and cellular localization of the mutant receptors were determined by Forster resonance energy transfer and confocal microscopy. The potential therapeutic effects of the pharmacological compounds 9-cis retinal and metformin were also examined. Human and bovine P23H rhodopsin mutants exhibited different aggregation properties and responses to the pharmacological compounds tested. These observations would lead to different predictions on the severity of the phenotype and divergent predictions on the benefit of the therapeutic compounds tested. The bovine rhodopsin template does not appear to adequately model the effects of the P23H mutation in the human form of the receptor.

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