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Aberrant metabolites in mouse models of congenital blinding diseases: formation and storage of retinyl esters
Authors:Maeda Akiko  Maeda Tadao  Imanishi Yoshikazu  Golczak Marcin  Moise Alexander R  Palczewski Krzysztof
Affiliation:Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106-4965, USA.
Abstract:Regeneration of the visual chromophore, 11-cis-retinal, is a critical step in restoring photoreceptors to their dark-adapted conditions. This regeneration process, called the retinoid cycle, takes place in the photoreceptor outer segments and the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Disabling mutations in nearly all of the retinoid cycle genes are linked to human conditions that cause congenital or progressive defects in vision. Several mouse models with disrupted genes related to this cycle contain abnormal fatty acid retinyl ester levels in the RPE. To investigate the mechanisms of retinyl ester accumulation, we generated single or double knockout mice lacking retinoid cycle genes. All-trans-retinyl esters accumulated in mice lacking RPE65, but they are reduced in double knockout mice also lacking opsin, suggesting a connection between visual pigment regeneration and the retinoid cycle. Only Rdh5-deficient mice accumulate cis-retinyl esters, regardless of the simultaneous disruption of RPE65, opsin, and prRDH. 13-cis-Retinoids are produced at higher levels when the flow of retinoid through the cycle was increased, and these esters are stored in specific structures called retinosomes. Most importantly, retinylamine, a specific and effective inhibitor of the 11-cis-retinol formation, also inhibits the production of 13-cis-retinyl esters. The data presented here support the idea that 13-cis-retinyl esters are formed through an aberrant enzymatic isomerization process.
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