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On the molecular pathology of neurodegeneration in IMPDH1-based retinitis pigmentosa. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Retinitis pigmentosa (RP), a hereditary eye disease, significantly contributes to blindness in working-age individuals in developed countries, with specific mutations in the IMPDH1 gene linked to a severe form known as RP10.
  • Research shows that the majority of GTP necessary for photoreceptor function is produced by the IMPDH1 enzyme, while mice lacking IMPDH1 exhibit gradual retinal degeneration but retain some photoreceptor integrity.
  • The study indicates that RP10's severity is likely due to the misfolding and aggregation of mutant IMPDH1 proteins rather than reduced enzyme activity, suggesting potential therapeutic strategies could involve targeting both normal and mutant IMPDH1 alleles while increasing GTP levels in retinas.

Article Abstract

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP), the hereditary degenerative disease of the photoreceptor neurons of the retina, probably represents the most prevalent cause of registered blindness amongst those of working age in developed countries. Mutations within the gene encoding inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase 1 (IMPDH1), the widely expressed rate-limiting enzyme of the de novo pathway of guanine nucleotide biosynthesis, have recently been shown to cause the RP10 form of autosomal dominant RP. We examined the expression of IMPDH1, IMPDH2 and HPRT transcripts, encoding enzymes of the de novo and salvage pathways of guanine nucleotide biosynthesis, respectively, in retinal sections of mice, the data indicating that the bulk of GTP within photoreceptors is generated by IMPDH1. Impdh1(-/-) null mice are shown here to display a slowly progressive form of retinal degeneration in which visual transduction, analysed by electroretinographic wave functions, becomes gradually compromised, although at 12 months of age most photoreceptors remain structurally intact. In contrast, the human form of RP caused by mutations within the IMPDH1 gene is a severe autosomal dominant degenerative retinopathy in those families that have been examined to date. Expression of mutant IMPDH1 proteins in bacterial and mammalian cells, together with computational simulations, indicate that protein misfolding and aggregation, rather than reduced IMPDH1 enzyme activity, is the likely cause of the severe phenotype experienced by human subjects. Taken together, these findings suggest that RP10 may represent an attractive target for therapeutic intervention, based upon a strategy combining simultaneous suppression of transcripts from normal and mutant IMPDH1 alleles with supplementation of GTP within retinal tissues.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddh061DOI Listing

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