One-third of Japanese patients with nonsyndromic arRP carried probable pathogenic mutations in the EYS gene, including two founder mutations. Because the genotype was correlated with the phenotype, genotyping in the EYS gene could be a valuable tool for predicting long-term prognoses of Japanese patients with arRP and thus could be useful for genetic counseling and future gene therapy.
BackgroundGeneration of induced photoreceptors holds promise for in vitro modeling of intractable retinal diseases. Retinitis pigmentosa is an inherited retinal dystrophy that leads to visual impairment. The EYS gene was reported to be the most common gene responsible for autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa (arRP). arRP with defects in the EYS gene is denoted by “EYS-RP”. We previously established a “redirect differentiation” method to generate photosensitive photoreceptor-like cells from commercially available human dermal fibroblasts. In this study, we produced photoreceptor-like cells from dermal fibroblasts of EYS-RP patients as a replacement for the degenerative retinas using “redirect differentiation”. We analyzed defective transcripts of the EYS gene in these cells to elucidate phenotypes of EYS-RP patients because decay of transcripts was previously suggested to be involved in phenotypic variation associated with diseases.MethodsUsing “redirect differentiation” by CRX, RAX, NeuroD and OTX2, we made photoreceptor-directed fibroblasts derived from three normal volunteers and three EYS-RP patients with homozygous or heterozygous mutations. We tested inducible expression of the photoreceptor-specific genes (blue opsin, rhodopsin, recoverin, S-antigen, PDE6C) in these cells. We then analyzed transcripts derived from three different types of the defective EYS gene, c.1211dupA, c.4957dupA and c.8805C > A, expressed in these cells by RT-PCR and sequencing.ResultsPhotoreceptor-specific genes including the EYS gene were up-regulated in all the photoreceptor-directed fibroblasts tested. However, expression levels of defective transcripts were markedly different depending on the type of mutation. Transcripts derived from these three defective genes were scarcely detected, expressed at a lower level, and expressed at almost the same level as in normal volunteers, respectively.ConclusionsExpression levels of genetically defective EYS gene transcripts in photoreceptor-directed fibroblasts of EYS-RP patients vary depending on the type of mutation. Variation in expression levels in transcripts having c.1211dupA, c.4957dupA and c.8805C > A suggests that almost complete nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD), partial NMD and escape from NMD occurred for these transcripts, respectively. To determine the relationship with phenotypic variations in EYS-RP patients, more samples are needed. The present study also suggests that the redirect differentiation method could be a valuable tool for disease modeling despite some limitations.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1186/s13287-018-1016-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Signaling pathways generally contain multiple negative regulators that are induced by the signal they repress, constructing negative feedback loops. Although such negative regulators are often expressed in a tissue-or cell-type specific manner during development, little is known about the significance of their differential expression patterns and possible interactions. We show the role and interplay of two cell-type specific negative feedback loops during specification of photoreceptor neurons in the Drosophila compound eye, a process that occurs via epidermal growth factor (EGF)-mediated sequential induction through the activation of the Ras/MAPK signaling pathway.
Inducing cells secreting EGF express a negative regulator Sprouty (SPRY) that lowers Ras/MAPK signaling activity, and as a consequence reduces the signal-dependent expression of a secreted EGF inhibitor, Argos (AOS). Induced cells in turn express an orphan nuclear receptor Seven-up (SVP), which represses SPRY expression thereby allowing expression and secretion of AOS, preventing further induction. When this intricate system fails, as in spry mutants, sequential induction is no longer constant and the number of photoreceptor neurons becomes variable. Thus, cell-type specific utilization of multiple negative feedback loops not only confers developmental robustness through functional redundancy, but is a key component in generating consistent patterning.
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