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Human iPSC-derived RPE and retinal organoids reveal impaired alternative splicing of genes involved in pre-mRNA splicing in PRPF31 autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa

Authors :
Adriana Buskin
Lili Zhu
Valeria Chichagova
Basudha Basu
Sina Mozaffari-Jovin
David Dolan
Alastair Droop
Joseph Collin
Revital Bronstein
Sudeep Mehrotra
Michael Farkas
Gerrit Hilgen
Kathryn White
Dean Hallam
Katarzyna Bialas
Git Chung
Carla Mellough
Yuchun Ding
Natalio Krasnogor
Stefan Przyborski
Jumana Al-Aama
Sameer Alharthi
Yaobo Xu
Gabrielle Wheway
Katarzyna Szymanska
Martin McKibbin
Chris F Inglehearn
David J Elliott
Susan Lindsay
Robin R Ali
David H Steel
Lyle Armstrong
Evelyne Sernagor
Eric Pierce
Reinhard Lüehrmann
Sushma-Nagaraja Grellscheid
Colin A Johnson
Majlinda Lako
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2017.

Abstract

SummaryMutations in pre-mRNA processing factors (PRPFs) cause 40% of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa (RP), but it is unclear why mutations in ubiquitously expressed PRPFs cause retinal disease. To understand the molecular basis of this phenotype, we have generated RP type 11 (PRPF31-mutated) patient-specific retinal organoids and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC). Impaired alternative splicing of genes encoding pre-mRNA splicing proteins occurred in patient-specific retinal cells and Prpf31+/− mouse retinae, but not fibroblasts and iPSCs, providing mechanistic insights into retinal-specific phenotypes of PRPFs. RPE was the most affected, characterised by loss of apical-basal polarity, reduced trans-epithelial resistance, phagocytic capacity, microvilli, and cilia length and incidence. Disrupted cilia morphology was observed in patient-derived-photoreceptors that displayed progressive features associated with degeneration and cell stress. In situ gene-editing of a pathogenic mutation rescued key structural and functional phenotypes in RPE and photoreceptors, providing proof-of-concept for future therapeutic strategies.eTOCPRPF31 is a ubiquitously expressed pre-mRNA processing factor that when mutated causes autosomal dominant RP. Using a patient-specific iPSC approach, Buskin and Zhu et al. show that retinal-specific defects result from altered splicing of genes involved in the splicing process itself, leading to impaired splicing, loss of RPE polarity and diminished phagocytic ability as well as reduced cilia incidence and length in both photoreceptors and RPE.HighlightsSuccessful generation of iPSC-derived RPE and photoreceptors from four RP type 11 patientsRPE cells express the mutant PRPF31 protein and show the lowest expression of wildtype proteinPRPF31 mutations result in altered splicing of genes involved in pre-mRNA splicing in RPE and retinal organoidsPrpf31 haploinsufficiency results in altered splicing of genes involved in pre-mRNA splicing in mouse retinaRPE cells display loss of polarity, reduced barrier function and phagocytosisPhotoreceptors display shorter and fewer cilia and degenerative featuresRPE cells display most abnormalities suggesting they might be the primary site of pathogenesisIn situ gene editing corrects the mutation and rescues key phenotypes

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5d3576fd9a8e320b379f3a6a5616bf33
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/232397