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Article Abstract

Dehydrodolichyl diphosphate synthase complex subunit (DHDDS) is required for protein glycosylation in eukaryotes, and variants. Surprisingly, three variant alleles (K42E/K42E, T206A/K42E and R98W/K42E) have been reported to cause retinitis pigmentosa 59 (RP59). Because T206A only has been reported to occur heterozygously with K42E, we generated homozygous and hererozygous mutants - i.e. T206A/T206A and T206A/K42E, respectively - in mice to assess the effect of the T206A allele. By postnatal age of 12 month (PN 12-mo), T206A/T206A and T206A/K42E mice exhibited reduction of inner nuclear layer thickness as observed in K42E/K42E mice. Electroretinography (ERG) revealed a reduction in b-waves, but spared reduction in a-wave amplitudes. By PN 3-mo, ERG c- and d-waves were significantly attenuated in all phenotypes. Consistent with a reduction in inner nuclear layer thickness as seen by using optical coherence tomography (OCT), cell loss observed by histology, as well as bipolar and amacrine cell densities were reduced in all Dhdds mutant phenotypes compared to those of PN 8-12 mo age-matched controls. These results indicated that the DHDDS T206A allele, like the K42E allele, causes retinal disease, probably through a common pathobiological mechanism. We propose that the physiological basis of retinal dysfunction in RP59 involves defective photoreceptor to bipolar cell synaptic transmission with concomitant bipolar/amacrine cell degeneration.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12352288PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/dmm.052243DOI Listing

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Dhdds T206A and Dhdds K42E knock-in mouse models of retinitis pigmentosa 59 are phenotypically similar.

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Department of Optometry and Vision Science, Vision Science Research Center, School of Optometry, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA.

Dehydrodolichyl diphosphate synthase complex subunit (DHDDS) is required for protein glycosylation in eukaryotes, and variants. Surprisingly, three variant alleles (K42E/K42E, T206A/K42E and R98W/K42E) have been reported to cause retinitis pigmentosa 59 (RP59). Because T206A only has been reported to occur heterozygously with K42E, we generated homozygous and hererozygous mutants - i.

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D e h ydro d olichyl d iphosphate s ynthase (DHDDS) is an essential enzyme required for several forms of protein glycosylation in all eukaryotic cells. Surprisingly, three mutant alleles, ( (K42E/K42E), (T206A/K42E), and found in only one patient, (R98W/K42E) have been reported that cause non-syndromic retinitis pigmentosa (RP59), an inherited retinal degeneration (IRD). Because T206A was only observed heterozygously with the K42E allele in RP59 patients, we used CRISPR/CAS9 technology to generate T206A/T206A, and subsequently T206A/K42E alleles in mice to assess the contribution of the T206A allele to the disease phenotype, to model the human disease, and to compare resulting phenotypes to our homozygous K42E mouse model.

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We observed a characteristic shortening of plasma and urinary dolichols in retinitis pigmentosa (RP) patients carrying K42E and T206A mutations in the dehydrodolichol diphosphate synthase (DHDDS) gene, using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Dolichol-18 (D18) became the dominant dolichol species in patients instead of dolichol-19 (D19) in normal individuals. The D18/D19 ratio was calculated and used as an index of dolichol length distribution.

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