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Single cell RNA sequencing confirms retinal microglia activation associated with early onset retinal degeneration

Authors :
Asha Kumari
Raul Ayala-Ramirez
Juan Carlos Zenteno
Kristyn Huffman
Roman Sasik
Radha Ayyagari
Shyamanga Borooah
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-20 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Mutations in the Membrane-type frizzled related protein (Mfrp) gene results in an early-onset retinal degeneration associated with retinitis pigmentosa, microphthalmia, optic disc drusen and foveal schisis. In the current study, a previously characterized mouse model of human retinal degeneration carrying homozygous c.498_499insC mutations in Mfrp (Mfrp KI/KI) was used. Patients carrying this mutation have retinal degeneration at an early age. The model demonstrates subretinal deposits and develops early-onset photoreceptor degeneration. We observed large subretinal deposits in Mfrp KI/KI mice which were strongly CD68 positive and co-localized with autofluorescent spots. Single cell RNA sequencing of Mfrp KI/KI mice retinal microglia showed a significantly higher number of pan-macrophage marker Iba-1 and F4/80 positive cells with increased expression of activation marker (CD68) and lowered microglial homeostatic markers (TMEM119, P2ry13, P2ry13, Siglech) compared with wild type mice confirming microglial activation as observed in retinal immunostaining showing microglia activation in subretinal region. Trajectory analysis identified a small cluster of microglial cells with activation transcriptomic signatures that could represent a subretinal microglia population in Mfrp KI/KI mice expressing higher levels of APOE. We validated these findings using immunofluorescence staining of retinal cryosections and found a significantly higher number of subretinal Iba-1/ApoE positive microglia in Mfrp KI/KI mice with some subretinal microglia also expressing lowered levels of microglial homeostatic marker TMEM119, confirming microglial origin. In summary, we confirm that Mfrp KI/KI mice carrying the c.498_499insC mutation had a significantly higher population of activated microglia in their retina with distinct subsets of subretinal microglia. Further, studies are required to confirm whether the association of increased subretinal microglia in MfrpKI/KI mice are causal in degeneration.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0afd4618ed6543c89f68e663ea00ae78
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-19351-w