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Volume 16, Number 24,
Issue of December 15, 1996
pp. 7853-7858
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Polygenic Disease and Retinitis Pigmentosa: Albinism Exacerbates
Photoreceptor Degeneration Induced by the Expression of a Mutant Opsin
in Transgenic Mice
Received July 24, 1996; revised Sept. 24, 1996; accepted Sept. 27, 1996.
Muna I. Naash1,
Harris Ripps1,
Shihong Li1,
Yoshinobu Goto2, 3, and
Neal S. Peachey2, 3
1 Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences,
University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois 60612, 2 Hines VA Hospital, Hines, Illinois 60141, and
3 Department of Neurology, Stritch School of Medicine,
Loyola University of Chicago, Maywood, Illinois 60153
Expression of a mouse opsin transgene containing three point
mutations (V20G, P23H, and P27L; termed VPP) causes a progressive photoreceptor degeneration that resembles in many important respects that seen in patients with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa caused by a P23H point mutation. We have attempted to determine whether
the degree of degeneration induced by expression of the transgene is
influenced by albinism, a genetically mediated recessive trait that
results in a deficiency in melanin formation in pigmented tissues
throughout the body. Litters of albino and pigmented mice (normal as
well as transgenic) were reared in either darkness or cyclic light.
Retinal structure and function were evaluated by light microscopy,
electroretinography (ERG), and retinal densitometry. The data were
consistent in demonstrating that at similar ages, the extent of
photoreceptor degeneration was greater in transgenic albino animals
than in their pigmented counterparts. The albino VPP mice had
significantly fewer cell bodies in the outer nuclear layer of the
retina, a larger reduction in ERG amplitude, and a lower rhodopsin
content in the rod photoreceptors. These structural and functional
differences could not be attributed to the greater level of retinal
illumination experienced by the albino retina under normal ambient
conditions, because they persisted when pigmented and albino mice were
reared in darkness from birth. Although the explanation remains
unclear, our findings indicate that the rate of photoreceptor
degeneration in VPP mice is adversely affected by the existence of the
albino phenotype, a factor that may have implications for the
counseling of human patients with retinitis pigmentosa and a familial
history of other genetic disorders.
Key words:
dark-rearing;
albinism;
pigmented mice;
retinitis
pigmentosa;
electroretinogram;
rhodopsin density;
transgenic mice
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