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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 9, 2003, 23(14):6030-6040
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Retinoschisin, a Photoreceptor-Secreted Protein, and Its Interaction with Bipolar and Müller Cells
Silvia N. M. Reid,1
Clyde Yamashita,1 and
Debora B. Farber1,2
1Jules Stein Eye Institute, University of
California Los Angeles School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 90095, and
2Molecular Biology Institute, University of California
Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095
Usually, photoreceptors interact with other retinal cells through the
neurotransmitter glutamate. Here we describe a nonsynaptic interaction via a
secreted protein, retinoschisin. Using in situ hybridization, we
found that from early postnatal life retinoschisin mRNA is present only in the
outer retina of the mouse, and with single-cell RT-PCR we demonstrated its
localization in rod and cone photoreceptor cells but not in Müller cells.
Western blot analyses of proteins from cultured ocular tissues and
microdissected outer and inner retinas, as well as from the culture media of
these samples, showed that retinoschisin is secreted from the photoreceptor
cells. Immunostaining of permeabilized and nonpermeabilized dissociated
retinal cells revealed that retinoschisin is mainly inside and outside the
photoreceptors, outside bipolar cells, and associated with plasma membranes of
Müller cells and inside their distal processes. Because we showed
previously that retinoschisin is distributed all over the retina, our current
data suggest that after synthesis and secretion by the photoreceptors,
retinoschisin reaches the surface of retinal cells and mediates
interactions/adhesion between photoreceptor, bipolar, and Müller cells,
contributing to the maintenance of the cytoarchitectural integrity of the
retina. These interactions may not occur when the gene encoding retinoschisin
is mutated, as it occurs in X-linked juvenile retinoschisis, a disease that
results in morphological and electrophysiological defects of the retina.
Key words: photoreceptor; glia; neurodegenerative disease; retinal disease; retinal development; neurodegeneration; bipolar cell; protein secretion; cell interaction; retinoschisis; Müller cell
Received Dec. 30, 2002;
revised Apr. 8, 2003;
accepted Apr. 18, 2003.
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