4.7 Article

Impaired Ca2+ Sensitivity of a Novel GCAP1 Variant Causes Cone Dystrophy and Leads to Abnormal Synaptic Transmission Between Photoreceptors and Bipolar Cells

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22084030

Keywords

GUCA1A; neuronal calcium sensor; phototransduction; synaptic transmission; cone dystrophy; guanylate cyclase; calcium binding proteins; bipolar cells; photoreceptors; retinal degeneration

Funding

  1. Fondazione Telethon-Italy [GGP16010]
  2. University of Verona [JPVR184ZZ5]
  3. Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research [PRIN 2017 201744NR8S]
  4. Ministry of Education, University and Research (core grants linea D1 Universita Cattolica)
  5. Retina Italia Onlus
  6. Rare Partners

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This study presents a novel GCAP1 variant associated with cone dystrophy (COD), characterized by severe alterations in electroretinogram under both scotopic and photopic conditions. Biochemical and biophysical analysis revealed compromised Ca2+-sensitivity of the variant, leading to constitutive activation of guanylate cyclase at physiological Ca2+ levels. The dysregulation of the GCAP1-cyclase complex not only affects second messenger accumulation and cell death, but also disrupts synaptic communication with bipolar cells, ultimately altering the ON-pathway related to b-wave generation.
Guanylate cyclase-activating protein 1 (GCAP1) is involved in the shutdown of the phototransduction cascade by regulating the enzymatic activity of retinal guanylate cyclase via a Ca2+/cGMP negative feedback. While the phototransduction-associated role of GCAP1 in the photoreceptor outer segment is widely established, its implication in synaptic transmission to downstream neurons remains to be clarified. Here, we present clinical and biochemical data on a novel isolate GCAP1 variant leading to a double amino acid substitution (p.N104K and p.G105R) and associated with cone dystrophy (COD) with an unusual phenotype. Severe alterations of the electroretinogram were observed under both scotopic and photopic conditions, with a negative pattern and abnormally attenuated b-wave component. The biochemical and biophysical analysis of the heterologously expressed N104K-G105R variant corroborated by molecular dynamics simulations highlighted a severely compromised Ca2+-sensitivity, accompanied by minor structural and stability alterations. Such differences reflected on the dysregulation of both guanylate cyclase isoforms (RetGC1 and RetGC2), resulting in the constitutive activation of both enzymes at physiological levels of Ca2+. As observed with other GCAP1-associated COD, perturbation of the homeostasis of Ca2+ and cGMP may lead to the toxic accumulation of second messengers, ultimately triggering cell death. However, the abnormal electroretinogram recorded in this patient also suggested that the dysregulation of the GCAP1-cyclase complex further propagates to the synaptic terminal, thereby altering the ON-pathway related to the b-wave generation. In conclusion, the pathological phenotype may rise from a combination of second messengers' accumulation and dysfunctional synaptic communication with bipolar cells, whose molecular mechanisms remain to be clarified.

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