Early disruption of photoreceptor cell architecture and loss of vision in a humanized pig model of usher syndromes

  • Grotz S
  • Schäfer J
  • Wunderlich K
  • et al.
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Abstract

Usher syndrome (USH) is the most common form of monogenic deaf-blindness. Loss of vision is untreatable and there are no suitable animal models for testing therapeutic strategies of the ocular constituent of USH, so far. By introducing a human mutation into the harmonin-encoding USH1C gene in pigs, we generated the first translational animal model for USH type 1 with characteristic hearing defect, vestibular dysfunction, and visual impairment. Changes in photoreceptor architecture, quantitative motion analysis, and elec-troretinography were characteristics of the reduced retinal virtue in USH1C pigs. Fibroblasts from USH1C pigs or USH1C patients showed significantly elongated primary cilia, confirming USH as a true and general ciliopathy. Primary cells also proved their capacity for assessing the therapeutic potential of CRISPR/Cas-mediated gene repair or gene therapy in vitro. AAV-based delivery of harmonin into the eye of USH1C pigs indicated therapeutic efficacy in vivo.

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Grotz, S., Schäfer, J., Wunderlich, K. A., Ellederova, Z., Auch, H., Bähr, A., … Klymiuk, N. (2022). Early disruption of photoreceptor cell architecture and loss of vision in a humanized pig model of usher syndromes. EMBO Molecular Medicine, 14(4). https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.202114817

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