AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the role of retinol-binding protein (RBP4) and its receptor RBPR2 in vitamin A distribution and visual function in mice.
  • It compares the effects of vitamin A sufficient and deficient diets on wild-type (WT) and RBPR2 knockout (KO) mice, assessing retinal and non-retinal tissue vitamin A levels and visual responses over time.
  • Findings reveal that RBPR2 loss leads to reduced retinoid content and impaired visual function, highlighting the importance of dietary vitamin A and proper receptor function for maintaining vision.

Article Abstract

The distribution of dietary vitamin A/all- retinol (ROL) throughout the body is critical for maintaining retinoid function in peripheral tissues and for generating visual pigments for photoreceptor cell function. ROL circulates in the blood bound to the retinol binding protein 4 (RBP4) as RBP4-ROL. Two membrane receptors, RBPR2 in the liver and STRA6 in the eye are proposed to bind circulatory RBP4 and this mechanism is critical for internalizing ROL into cells. Here, we present a longitudinal investigation towards the importance of RBPR2 and influence of the diet on systemic retinoid homeostasis for visual function. Age matched -KO ( ) and wild-type (WT) mice were fed either a vitamin A sufficient (VAS) or a vitamin A deficient (VAD) diet. At 3- and 6-months, we performed retinoid quantification of ocular and non-ocular tissues using HPLC analysis and complemented the data with visual physiology, rhodopsin quantification by spectrophotometry, and biochemical analysis. At 3-months and compared to WT mice, mice fed either vitamin A diets displayed lower scotopic and photopic electroretinogram (ERG) responses, which correlated with HPLC analysis that revealed mice had significantly lower hepatic and ocular retinoid content. Interestingly, with the exception of the liver, long-term feeding of mice with a VAS diet promoted all- retinol accumulation in most peripheral tissues. However, even under VAS dietary conditions significant amounts of unliganded opsins in rods, together with decreased visual responses were evident in aged mice lacking RBPR2, when compared to WT mice. Together, our analyses characterize the molecular events underlying nutritional blindness in a novel mouse model and indicate that loss of the liver specific RBP4-ROL receptor, RBPR2, influences systemic retinoid homeostasis and rhodopsin synthesis, which causes profound visual function defects under severe vitamin A deficiency conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11257425PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.07.08.602543DOI Listing

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