[HTML][HTML] Mice with a D190N Mutation in the Gene Encoding Rhodopsin: A Model for Human Autosomal-Dominant Retinitis Pigmentosa

J Sancho-Pelluz, J Tosi, CW Hsu, F Lee, K Wolpert… - Molecular …, 2012 - Springer
J Sancho-Pelluz, J Tosi, CW Hsu, F Lee, K Wolpert, MR Tabacaru, JP Greenberg, SH Tsang
Molecular medicine, 2012Springer
Rhodopsin is the G protein-coupled receptor in charge of initiating signal transduction in rod
photoreceptor cells upon the arrival of the photon. D190N (Rho D190n), a missense
mutation in rhodopsin, causes autosomal-dominant retinitis pigmentosa (adRP) in humans.
Affected patients present hyperfluorescent retinal rings and progressive rod photoreceptor
degeneration. Studies in humans cannot reveal the molecular processes causing the
earliest stages of the condition, thus necessitating the creation of an appropriate animal …
Abstract
Rhodopsin is the G protein-coupled receptor in charge of initiating signal transduction in rod photoreceptor cells upon the arrival of the photon. D190N (RhoD190n), a missense mutation in rhodopsin, causes autosomal-dominant retinitis pigmentosa (adRP) in humans. Affected patients present hyperfluorescent retinal rings and progressive rod photoreceptor degeneration. Studies in humans cannot reveal the molecular processes causing the earliest stages of the condition, thus necessitating the creation of an appropriate animal model. A knock-in mouse model with the D190N mutation was engineered to study the pathogenesis of the disease. Electrophysiological and histological findings in the mouse were similar to those observed in human patients, and the hyperfluorescence pattern was analogous to that seen in humans, confirming that the D190N mouse is an accurate model for the study of adRP.
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