| Literature DB >> 29296074 |
Aditya Venkatesh1, Shun-Yun Cheng1, Claudio Punzo1,2.
Abstract
Purpose: The apoptotic mechanisms responsible for secondary cone death in retinitis pigmentosa (RP) remain largely unknown. The cone-enriched apoptotic protease caspase-7 (Casp7) is thought to be triggered by endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and plays a pivotal role in mice deficient in the cone cyclic nucleotide-gated channels, a deficiency that causes achromatopsia in humans and in mice with autosomal dominant rhodopsin mutations, in particular the T17M mutation. Thus, we tested in two mouse models of RP whether the cone-enriched Casp7 plays a role during secondary cone death.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29296074 PMCID: PMC5741377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Vis ISSN: 1090-0535 Impact factor: 2.367
Figure 1Loss of Casp7 does not affect rod and cone function in a wild-type background. A, B: Electroretinogram (ERG) recordings at 20 weeks of age showing averages of b-wave amplitudes of scotopic ERGs over five different light intensities (A) and average of b-wave amplitudes of photopic ERGs (B) n=6 in A and B; Error bars: SEM. C: Immunofluorescence analysis on a cross section at 20 weeks of age showing normal expression of cone arrestin (red signal) and normal labeling of cone segment sheets with PNA (green signal). Blue: nuclear 4´,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). (Blue and green signals were removed from one third of each panel to better visualize the cone arrestin staining.) Scale bar: 20 μm.
Figure 2Loss of Casp7 does not affect rod degeneration. A: Retinal cross section of 3-week-old Casp7 and Casp7 mice stained with 4´,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) showing no difference in the thickness of the outer nuclear layer in the central retina (n = 3 animals; the zoomed-in view shows one row of cells above the dotted line which separated the outer nuclear layer from the inner nuclear layer). B: Retinal flat mounts stained with cone arrestin (red signal) showing no difference in the distribution of cones at the onset of cone death (genotype and age same as in panel A). C: Retinal cross section of 17-week-old Casp7 and Casp7 mice showing no difference in the thickness of the outer nuclear layer in the central retina (n = 3 animals; the dotted line separates the outer nuclear layer from the inner nuclear layer).
Figure 3Loss of Casp7 does not affect cone death in the rd1 mouse model of RP. A: Western blot analysis at postnatal (P) days 21, 35, and 70 with retinal extracts from Casp7 and Casp7 mice showing on the left no cleaved CASP7 protein in Casp7 mice, a decline in the CASP7 protein over time, consistent with its enrichment in cones, and a lack of detectable CASP7 protein in Casp7 mice. To the right, the western blot analysis with protein extracts from HEK293 cells show cleavage of the CASP7 protein after rapamycin treatment or overexpression of Casp7, indicating that the antibody is able to recognize the cleaved product and that dimerization by overexpression is sufficient to activate CASP7 (the lines on the right of both western blots indicate molecular weight markers in kDa; starting from the top line, their respective sizes are 37, 25, 20, 15, 10; arrows on right side of the western blot point to pro-CASP7 while the arrow on the left of the western blot points to the cleaved CASP7 product). B: Immunofluorescence on retinal flat mounts to detect active CASP7 (the green signal indicates the fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)–labeled CASP7 activity peptide) in the Casp7 and Casp7 mice. Because the FITC signal is still present in Casp7 mice, the peptide is likely cross-reacting. C: Higher magnification of the assay in (B) showing that cone cells strongly labeled by the FITC CASP7 activity peptide (arrowheads) tend to have pyknotic nuclei and less cone arrestin immunoreactivity (red signal), suggesting that the peptide was labeling dying cones (blue: nuclear 4´,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole [DAPI]). D: Examples of retinal flat mounts of Casp7 and Casp7 mice stained for cone arrestin (red signal) expression at 6 and 20 weeks of age. E: Quantification of cone survival at 6 and 20 weeks of age showed no statistically significant improvement in cone survival upon loss of Caspase-7 in rd1 mice. (n=6 per genotype and time point; Error bars: SEM).
Figure 4Loss of Casp7 does not affect secondary cone death in Rho-KO mice. A: Examples of retinal flat mounts of Casp7 and Casp7 mice stained for cone arrestin (red signal) expression at the onset of cone death (17 weeks) and a later time point (30 weeks) that corresponds to roughly 10 weeks in rd1 mice. B: Quantification of cone survival at 17 and 30 weeks of age of Casp7 and Casp7 mice. No statistically significant improvement in cone survival is seen upon loss of Casp7. C: B-wave amplitudes of photopic electroretinogram recordings showed also no statistically significant improvement in cone function upon loss of Casp7. (n=6 per genotype and time point in B and C; Error bars: SEM).