BBSome function is required for both the morphogenesis and maintenance of the photoreceptor outer segment

Ying Hsu(University of Iowa), Janelle Garrison(University of Iowa), Gun‐Hee Kim(University of Iowa), Addison R. Schmitz(University of Iowa), Charles Searby(University of Iowa), Qihong Zhang(University of Iowa), Poppy Datta(University of Iowa), Darryl Nishimura(University of Iowa), Seongjin Seo(University of Iowa), Val C. Sheffield(University of Iowa)
PLoS Genetics
October 19, 2017
Cited by 78Open Access
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Abstract

Genetic mutations disrupting the structure and function of primary cilia cause various inherited retinal diseases in humans. Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a genetically heterogeneous, pleiotropic ciliopathy characterized by retinal degeneration, obesity, postaxial polydactyly, intellectual disability, and genital and renal abnormalities. To gain insight into the mechanisms of retinal degeneration in BBS, we developed a congenital knockout mouse of Bbs8, as well as conditional mouse models in which function of the BBSome (a protein complex that mediates ciliary trafficking) can be temporally inactivated or restored. We demonstrate that BBS mutant mice have defects in retinal outer segment morphogenesis. We further demonstrate that removal of Bbs8 in adult mice affects photoreceptor function and disrupts the structural integrity of the outer segment. Notably, using a mouse model in which a gene trap inhibiting Bbs8 gene expression can be removed by an inducible FLP recombinase, we show that when BBS8 is restored in immature retinas with malformed outer segments, outer segment extension can resume normally and malformed outer segment discs are displaced distally by normal outer segment structures. Over time, the retinas of the rescued mice become morphologically and functionally normal, indicating that there is a window of plasticity when initial retinal outer segment morphogenesis defects can be ameliorated.


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