4.8 Article

SARM1 depletion rescues NMNAT1-dependent photoreceptor cell death and retinal degeneration

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELIFE SCIENCES PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.62027

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Funding

  1. National Institute on Aging [AG013730]
  2. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [NS087632]
  3. National Cancer Institute [CA219866]
  4. National Eye Institute [EY019287-06]
  5. Needleman Center for Neurometabolism and Axonal therapeutics
  6. Edward N. & Della L. Thome Memorial Foundation
  7. Carl and Mildred Almen Reeves Foundation
  8. Starr Foundation
  9. Bill and Emily Kuzma Family Gift for Retinal Research
  10. Jeffrey Fort Innovation Fund
  11. Glenn Foundation for Medical Research
  12. Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc
  13. Washington University in St. Louis Medical Scientist Training Program (NIH) [T32 GM07200]
  14. Research to Prevent Blindness Nelson Trust Award

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Leber congenital amaurosis type nine is an autosomal recessive retinopathy caused by mutations of the NAD+ synthesis enzyme NMNAT1. Despite the ubiquitous expression of NMNAT1, patients do not manifest pathologies other than retinal degeneration. Here we demonstrate that widespread NMNAT1 depletion in adult mice mirrors the human pathology, with selective loss of photoreceptors highlighting the exquisite vulnerability of these cells to NMNAT1 loss. Conditional deletion demonstrates that NMNAT1 is required within the photoreceptor. Mechanistically, loss of NMNAT1 activates the NADase SARM1, the central executioner of axon degeneration, to trigger photoreceptor death and vision loss. Hence, the essential function of NMNAT1 in photoreceptors is to inhibit SARM1, highlighting an unexpected shared mechanism between axonal degeneration and photoreceptor neurodegeneration. These results define a novel SARM1-dependent photoreceptor cell death pathway and identifies SARM1 as a therapeutic candidate for retinopathies.

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