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Morphological and Molecular Defects in Human Three-Dimensional Retinal Organoid Model of X-Linked Juvenile Retinoschisis

Authors :
Ping Hsing Tsai
Audrey A. Tran
Wann-Neng Jane
Aliaksandr A. Yarmishyn
Yueh Chien
Shih Hwa Chiou
Chi Hsien Peng
Tien Chun Yang
Kang Chieh Huang
Chia-Ching Chang
Thorsten M. Schlaeger
Shih Jen Chen
Won Jing Wang
Jean Cheng Kuo
Karl J. Wahlin
Phan Nguyen Nhi Nguyen
Jyh Feng Lu
Michael Shi
Mong Lien Wang
Source :
Stem Cell Reports, Stem Cell Reports, Vol 13, Iss 5, Pp 906-923 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2019.

Abstract

Summary X-linked juvenile retinoschisis (XLRS), linked to mutations in the RS1 gene, is a degenerative retinopathy with a retinal splitting phenotype. We generated human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) from patients to study XLRS in a 3D retinal organoid in vitro differentiation system. This model recapitulates key features of XLRS including retinal splitting, defective retinoschisin production, outer-segment defects, abnormal paxillin turnover, and impaired ER-Golgi transportation. RS1 mutation also affects the development of photoreceptor sensory cilia and results in altered expression of other retinopathy-associated genes. CRISPR/Cas9 correction of the disease-associated C625T mutation normalizes the splitting phenotype, outer-segment defects, paxillin dynamics, ciliary marker expression, and transcriptome profiles. Likewise, mutating RS1 in control hiPSCs produces the disease-associated phenotypes. Finally, we show that the C625T mutation can be repaired precisely and efficiently using a base-editing approach. Taken together, our data establish 3D organoids as a valid disease model.<br />Highlights • hiPSC-derived retinal organoid model recapitulates key features of XLRS • CRISPR/Cas9 correction normalizes RS1 secretion and retinal development • Transcriptome analysis links XLRS to other hereditary retinopathies<br />Chiou, Schlaeger, and colleagues use hiPSC-derived retinal organoids to model X-linked juvenile retinoschisis. They show that patient hiPSC-derived retinal organoids replicate key pathologies observed in patients, including retinal splitting and photoreceptor deficit. The observed abnormalities were normalized in organoids derived from isogenic CRISPR/Cas9 gene-corrected hiPSCs. This validated XLRS in vitro model could be used to test and optimize therapeutic approaches.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22136711
Volume :
13
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stem Cell Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dafe748d9678f5e05e5f56e13c96ea89