4.7 Article

Retinal Proteomics of a Mouse Model of Dystroglycanopathies Reveals Molecular Alterations in Photoreceptors

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 20, Issue 6, Pages 3268-3277

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.1c00126

Keywords

mass spectrometry; retina; POMT1; outer segments; KIAA1549; MDDG

Funding

  1. Institute of Health Carlos III - European Regional Development Fund (ERDF/FEDER) [PI12/0157, PI15/073]
  2. Comunidad de Madrid (VISIONANIMAL Biomedicine project) - European Regional Development Fund (ERDF/FEDER) [S2010/BMD2439]
  3. Universidad de Alicante [UAUSTI19-17, VIGROB-237, UAEEBB2015FPU-14]

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Mutations in the POMT1 gene lead to low glycosylation of protein α-DG, frequently observed in rare muscular dystrophies. Study on Pomt1 cKO mice reveals proteomic changes and structural alterations in photoreceptor cells. Besides the impaired α-DG glycosylation, morphological alterations related to an understudied POMT1 substrate, BBSome proteins, and retinal stress markers are also observed.
Mutations in the POMT1 gene, encoding a protein O-mannosyltransferase essential for alpha-dystroglycan (alpha-DG) glycosylation, are frequently observed in a group of rare congenital muscular dystrophies, collectively known as dystroglycanopathies. However, it is hitherto unclear whether the effects seen in affected patients can be fully ascribed to alpha-DG hypoglycosylation. To study this, here we used comparative mass spectrometry-based proteomics and immunofluorescence microscopy and investigated the changes in the retina of mice in which Pomt1 is specifically knocked out in photoreceptor cells. Our results demonstrate significant proteomic changes and associated structural alteration in photoreceptor cells of Pomt1 cKO mice. In addition to the effects related to impaired alpha-DG O-mannosylation, we observed morphological alterations in the outer segment that are associated with dysregulation of a relatively understudied POMT1 substrate (KIAA1549), BBSome proteins, and retinal stress markers. In conclusion, our study provides new hypotheses to explain the phenotypic changes that are observed in the retina of patients with dystroglycanopathies.

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