Literature DB >> 9020854

Retinopathy induced in mice by targeted disruption of the rhodopsin gene.

M M Humphries1, D Rancourt, G J Farrar, P Kenna, M Hazel, R A Bush, P A Sieving, D M Sheils, N McNally, P Creighton, A Erven, A Boros, K Gulya, M R Capecchi, P Humphries.   

Abstract

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) represents the most common mendelian degenerative retinopathy of man, involving death of rod photoreceptors, cone cell degeneration, retinal vessel attenuation and pigmentary deposits. The patient experiences night blindness, usually followed by progressive loss of visual field. Genetic linkage between an autosomal dominant RP locus and rhodopsin, the photoreactive pigment of the rod cells, led to the identification of mutations within the rhodopsin gene in both dominant and recessive forms of RP. To better understand the functional and structural role of rhodopsin in the normal retina and in the pathogenesis of retinal disease, we generated mice carrying a targeted disruption of the rhodopsin gene. Rho-/- mice do not elaborate rod outer segments, losing their photoreceptors over 3 months. There is no rod ERG response in 8-week-old animals. Rho+/- animals retain the majority of their photoreceptors although the inner and outer segments of these cells display some structural disorganization, the outer segments becoming shorter in older mice. These animals should provide a useful genetic background on which to express other mutant opsin transgenes, as well as a model to assess the therapeutic potential of re-introducing functional rhodopsin genes into degenerating retinal tissues.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9020854     DOI: 10.1038/ng0297-216

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Genet        ISSN: 1061-4036            Impact factor:   38.330


  235 in total

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4.  Optimization of in vivo confocal autofluorescence imaging of the ocular fundus in mice and its application to models of human retinal degeneration.

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5.  Phototransduction in transgenic mice after targeted deletion of the rod transducin alpha -subunit.

Authors:  P D Calvert; N V Krasnoperova; A L Lyubarsky; T Isayama; M Nicoló; B Kosaras; G Wong; K S Gannon; R F Margolskee; R L Sidman; E N Pugh; C L Makino; J Lem
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Review 8.  Chemistry and biology of vision.

Authors:  Krzysztof Palczewski
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9.  Modulation of rod photoreceptor output by HCN1 channels is essential for regular mesopic cone vision.

Authors:  Mathias W Seeliger; Arne Brombas; Reto Weiler; Peter Humphries; Gabriel Knop; Naoyuki Tanimoto; Frank Müller
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10.  P23H opsin knock-in mice reveal a novel step in retinal rod disc morphogenesis.

Authors:  Sanae Sakami; Alexander V Kolesnikov; Vladimir J Kefalov; Krzysztof Palczewski
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