4.7 Article

Disruption of the Basal Body Protein POC1B Results in Autosomal-Recessive Cone-Rod Dystrophy

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 95, Issue 2, Pages 131-142

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.06.012

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Foundation Fighting Blindness [BR-GE-0510-04890RAD, C-CMM-0811-0547-RAD03, C-CMM-0811-0546-RAD02, C-GE-0811-0545-RAD01]
  2. Algemene Nederlandse Vereniging ter Voorkoming van Blindheid
  3. Gelderse Blinden Stichting
  4. Landelijke Stichting voor Blinden en Slechtzienden
  5. Stichting Blinden-Penning
  6. Stichting Macula Degeneratie fonds
  7. Rotterdamse Stichting Blindenbelangen
  8. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research [Vici-016.130.664, Veni-91613008, Veni-016.136.091]
  9. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMW) [40-42900-98-1006]
  10. European Community [241955 SYSCILIA]
  11. Radboudumc

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Exome sequencing revealed a homozygous missense mutation (c.317C>G [p.Arg106Pro]) in POC1B, encoding POC1 centriolar protein B, in three siblings with autosomal-recessive cone dystrophy or cone-rod dystrophy and compound-heterozygous POC1B mutations (c.199_201del [p.G1n67del] and c.810+1G>T) in an unrelated person with cone-rod dystrophy. Upon overexpression of POC1B in human TERT-immortalized retinal pigment epithelium 1 cells, the encoded wild-type protein localized to the basal body of the primary cilium, whereas this localization was lost for p.Arg106Pro and p.G1n67del variant forms of POC1B. Morpholino-oligonucleotide-induced knockdown of poc1b translation in zebrafish resulted in a dose-dependent small-eye phenotype, impaired optokinetic responses, and decreased length of photoreceptor outer segments. These ocular phenotypes could partially be rescued by wild-type human POC1B mRNA, but not by c.199_201del and c.317C>G mutant human POC1B mRNAs. Yeast two-hybrid screening of a human retinal cDNA library revealed FAM161A as a binary interaction partner of POC1B. This was confirmed in coimmunoprecipitation and colocalization assays, which both showed loss of FAM161A interaction with p.Arg106Pro and p.G1n67del variant forms of POC1B. FAM161A was previously implicated in autosomal-recessive retinitis pigmentosa and shown to be located at the base of the photoreceptor connecting cilium, where it interacts with several other ciliopathy-associated proteins. Altogether, this study demonstrates that POC1B mutations result in a defect of the photoreceptor sensory cilium and thus affect cone and rod photoreceptors.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available