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Título
RasGRF1 disruption causes retinal photoreception defects and associated transcriptomic alterations
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Knockout mice
Photoreception
Ras nucleotide exchange
RasGRF1
Retina
Transcriptome
Fecha de publicación
2009
Editor
Wiley
Citación
Fernández-Medarde, A., Barhoum, R., Riquelme, R., Porteros, A., Núñez, A., De Luis, A., De Las Rivas, J., De La Villa, P., Varela-Nieto, I., & Santos, E. (2009). RasGRF1 disruption causes retinal photoreception defects and associated transcriptomic alterations. Journal of Neurochemistry, 110(2), 641-652. https://doi.org/10.1111/J.1471-4159.2009.06162.X
Resumen
[EN]RasGRF1 null mutant mice display impaired memory/learning
and their hippocampus transcriptomic pattern includes a
number of differentially expressed genes playing significant
roles in sensory development and function. Odour avoidance
and auditory brainstem response tests yielded normal results
but electroretinographic analysis showed severe light perception impairment in the RasGRF1 knockouts. Whereas no
structural alterations distinguished the retinas of wild-type and
knockout mice, microarray transcriptional analysis identified at
least 44 differentially expressed genes in the retinas of these
Knockout animals. Among these, Crb1, Pttg1, Folh1 and
Myo7a have been previously related to syndromes involving
retina degeneration. Interestingly, over-expression of Folh1
would be expected to result in accumulation of its enzymatic
product N-acetyl-aspartate, an event known to be linked to
Canavan disease, a human cerebral degenerative syndrome
often involving blindness and hearing loss. Consistently,
in vivo brain nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy identified higher levels of N-acetyl-aspartate in our RasGRF1)/)
mice and immunohistochemical analysis detected reduced
levels of aspartoacylase, the enzyme which degrades Nacetyl-aspartate. These studies demonstrate for the first time
the functional relevance of Ras signalling in mammalian
photoreception and warrant further analysis of RasGRF1
Knockout mice as potential models to analyse molecular
mechanisms underlying defective photoreception human
diseases
URI
ISSN
0022-3042
DOI
10.1111/j.1471-4159.2009.06162.x
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