Retinal degeneration-3 protein promotes photoreceptor survival by suppressing activation of guanylyl cyclase rather than accelerating GMP recycling

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Abstract

Retinal degeneration-3 protein (RD3) deficiency causes photoreceptor dysfunction and rapid degeneration in the rd3 mouse strain and in human Lebers congenital amaurosis, a congenital retinal dystrophy that results in early vision loss. However, the mechanisms responsible for photoreceptor death remain unclear. Here, we tested two hypothesized biochemical events that may underlie photoreceptor death: (i) the failure to prevent aberrant activation of retinal guanylyl cyclase (RetGC) by calcium-sensor proteins (GCAPs) versus (ii) the reduction of GMP phosphorylation rate, preventing its recycling to GDP/ GTP. We found that GMP converts to GDP/GTP in the photoreceptor fraction of the retina ∼24-fold faster in WT mice and 400-fold faster in rd3 mice than GTP conversion to cGMP by RetGC. Adding purified RD3 to the retinal extracts inhibited RetGC 4-fold but did not affect GMP phosphoryla tion in wildtype or rd3 retinas. RD3-deficient photoreceptors rapidly degenerated in rd3 mice that were reared in constant darkness to prevent light-Activated GTP consumption via RetGC and phosphodiesterase 6. In contrast, rd3 degeneration was alleviated by deletion of GCAPs. After 2.5 months, only ∼40% of photoreceptors remained in rd3/rd3 retinas. Deletion of GCAP1 or GCAP2 alone preserved 68% and 57% of photo receptors, respectively, whereas deletion of GCAP1 and GCAP2 together preserved 86%. Taken together, our in vitro and in vivo results support the hypothesis that RD3 prevents photoreceptor death primarily by suppressing activation of RetGC by both GCAP1 and GCAP2 but do not support the hypothesis that RD3 plays a significant role in GMP recycling.

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APA

Dizhoor, A. M., Olshevskaya, E. V., & Peshenko, I. V. (2021). Retinal degeneration-3 protein promotes photoreceptor survival by suppressing activation of guanylyl cyclase rather than accelerating GMP recycling. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 296. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100362

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