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1.
J Biol Chem ; 289(43): 29767-89, 2014 Oct 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25187515

ABSTRACT

Retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) degeneration underpins diseases triggered by disparate genetic lesions, noxious insults, or both. The pleiotropic Ranbp2 controls the expression of intrinsic and extrinsic pathological stressors impinging on cellular viability. However, the physiological targets and mechanisms controlled by Ranbp2 in tissue homeostasis, such as RPE, are ill defined. We show that mice, RPE-cre::Ranbp2(-/-), with selective Ranbp2 ablation in RPE develop pigmentary changes, syncytia, hypoplasia, age-dependent centrifugal and non-apoptotic degeneration of the RPE, and secondary leakage of choriocapillaris. These manifestations are accompanied by the development of F-actin clouds, metalloproteinase-11 activation, deregulation of expression or subcellular localization of critical RPE proteins, atrophic cell extrusions into the subretinal space, and compensatory proliferation of peripheral RPE. To gain mechanistic insights into what Ranbp2 activities are vital to the RPE, we performed genetic complementation analyses of transgenic lines of bacterial artificial chromosomes of Ranbp2 harboring loss of function of selective Ranbp2 domains expressed in a Ranbp2(-/-) background. Among the transgenic lines produced, only Tg(RBD2/3*-HA)::RPE-cre::Ranbp2(-/-)-expressing mutations, which selectively impair binding of RBD2/3 (Ran-binding domains 2 and 3) of Ranbp2 to Ran-GTP, recapitulate RPE degeneration, as observed with RPE-cre::Ranbp2(-/-). By contrast, Tg(RBD2/3*-HA) expression rescues the degeneration of cone photoreceptors lacking Ranbp2. The RPE of RPE-cre::Ranbp2(-/-) and Tg(RBD2/3*-HA)::RPE-cre::Ranbp2(-/-) share proteostatic deregulation of Ran GTPase, serotransferrin, and γ-tubulin and suppression of light-evoked electrophysiological responses. These studies unravel selective roles of Ranbp2 and its RBD2 and RBD3 in RPE survival and functions. We posit that the control of Ran GTPase by Ranbp2 emerges as a novel therapeutic target in diseases promoting RPE degeneration.


Subject(s)
Gene Deletion , Molecular Chaperones/chemistry , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Nuclear Pore Complex Proteins/chemistry , Nuclear Pore Complex Proteins/metabolism , Retinal Pigment Epithelium/metabolism , Retinal Pigment Epithelium/pathology , Animals , Capillaries/pathology , Cell Proliferation , Cell Survival , Chromosomes, Artificial, Bacterial/metabolism , Disease Progression , Electrophysiological Phenomena , Integrases/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Mutation/genetics , Nuclear Pore Complex Proteins/deficiency , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Retinal Pigment Epithelium/physiopathology , Retinal Pigment Epithelium/ultrastructure , Structure-Activity Relationship
2.
PLoS Genet ; 9(6): e1003555, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23818861

ABSTRACT

Non-autonomous cell-death is a cardinal feature of the disintegration of neural networks in neurodegenerative diseases, but the molecular bases of this process are poorly understood. The neural retina comprises a mosaic of rod and cone photoreceptors. Cone and rod photoreceptors degenerate upon rod-specific expression of heterogeneous mutations in functionally distinct genes, whereas cone-specific mutations are thought to cause only cone demise. Here we show that conditional ablation in cone photoreceptors of Ran-binding protein-2 (Ranbp2), a cell context-dependent pleiotropic protein linked to neuroprotection, familial necrotic encephalopathies, acute transverse myelitis and tumor-suppression, promotes early electrophysiological deficits, subcellular erosive destruction and non-apoptotic death of cones, whereas rod photoreceptors undergo cone-dependent non-autonomous apoptosis. Cone-specific Ranbp2 ablation causes the temporal activation of a cone-intrinsic molecular cascade highlighted by the early activation of metalloproteinase 11/stromelysin-3 and up-regulation of Crx and CoREST, followed by the down-modulation of cone-specific phototransduction genes, transient up-regulation of regulatory/survival genes and activation of caspase-7 without apoptosis. Conversely, PARP1+ -apoptotic rods develop upon sequential activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3 and loss of membrane permeability. Rod photoreceptor demise ceases upon cone degeneration. These findings reveal novel roles of Ranbp2 in the modulation of intrinsic and extrinsic cell death mechanisms and pathways. They also unveil a novel spatiotemporal paradigm of progression of neurodegeneration upon cell-specific genetic damage whereby a cone to rod non-autonomous death pathway with intrinsically distinct cell-type death manifestations is triggered by cell-specific loss of Ranbp2. Finally, this study casts new light onto cell-death mechanisms that may be shared by human dystrophies with distinct retinal spatial signatures as well as with other etiologically distinct neurodegenerative disorders.


Subject(s)
Cell Death/genetics , Molecular Chaperones/genetics , Neurodegenerative Diseases/genetics , Nuclear Pore Complex Proteins/genetics , Retina/metabolism , Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells/metabolism , Animals , Cell Lineage , Humans , Light , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Nerve Net/metabolism , Neurodegenerative Diseases/pathology , Retina/pathology , Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells/pathology , Retinal Degeneration/genetics , Retinal Degeneration/pathology , Retinal Rod Photoreceptor Cells/cytology , Retinal Rod Photoreceptor Cells/metabolism , Up-Regulation
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