4.8 Article

ATF6 is essential for human cone photoreceptor development

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2103196118

Keywords

cone photoreceptors; retinal organoids; ATF6 signaling; achromatopsia; stem cell biology

Funding

  1. NIH [R01AG046495, F31AG063489, R01EY027335, R01EY017607, R01NS088485, P30NS047101]
  2. Veterans Affairs Merit Awards [I01BX002284, I01RX002340]
  3. California Institute for Regenerative Medicine [DISC2-10973]
  4. NIH Research Biomedical Research Centre at Moorfields Eye Hospital National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust
  5. University College London (UCL) Institute of Ophthalmology

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ER stress and UPR signaling contribute to human diseases, including severe congenital vision loss conditions like achromatopsia. Loss-of-function ATF6 variants lead to defective cone formation in the retina, highlighting the essential role of ATF6 in human cone development. Pharmacologic targeting of the ATF6 pathway may hold potential for treating blinding retinal diseases.
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and Unfolded Protein Response (UPR) signaling promote the pathology of many human diseases. Loss-of-function variants of the UPR regulator Activating Transcription Factor 6 (ATF6) cause severe congenital vision loss diseases such as achromatopsia by unclear pathomechanisms. To investigate this, we generated retinal organoids from achromatopsia patient induced pluripotent stem cells carrying ATF6 disease variants and from gene-edited ATF6 null hESCs. We found that achromatopsia patient and ATF6 null retinal organoids failed to form cone structures concomitant with loss of cone phototransduction gene expression, while rod photoreceptors developed normally. Adaptive optics retinal imaging of achromatopsia patients carrying ATF6 variants also showed absence of cone inner/outer segment structures but preserved rod structures, mirroring the defect in cone formation observed in our retinal organoids. These results establish that ATF6 is essential for human cone development. Interestingly, we find that a selective small molecule ATF6 signaling agonist restores the transcriptional activity of some ATF6 disease-causing variants and stimulates cone growth and gene expression in patient retinal organoids carrying these variants. These findings support that pharmacologic targeting of the ATF6 pathway can promote human cone development and should be further explored for blinding retinal diseases.

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