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From Gene Discovery to Preventing Eye Disease
in Retinitis Pigmentosa
(Philadelphia, PA) -- Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is an inherited
eye disease that causes visual disability leading to blindness. Over the
last 15 years, researchers have pinpointed defects in dozens of genes
causing different forms of RP. Surprisingly, patients with the same genetic
defect can show different severities of vision loss and rates of disease
progression. This effect is most dramatic across the retina of some individuals
where regions with normal vision can abut regions of no vision. Environmental
factors have been near the top of the suspect list for this variation
in severity. An environmental factor experienced by all, but to varying
extents, is exposure to light – bright lights have been previously
speculated to accelerate certain forms of RP.
Now, investigators from the University of Pennsylvania
and Cornell University provide evidence for retinal injury caused by moderate
light exposure in dogs with a mutation in the rhodopsin gene. Since the
blindness in these dogs mimics that observed in human RP caused by mutations
in the rhodopsin gene, the investigators strongly recommend limiting excess
light exposure in these patients.
“Rhodopsin is the light-catching molecule within rod photoreceptor
cells that afford us with night vision,” says Artur V. Cideciyan,
PhD, Research Associate Professor of Ophthalmology at Penn’s
Scheie Eye Institute, and lead author of the current
study published online this week in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
“About 100 mutations in the rhodopsin gene have been shown to cause
RP but our understanding of the steps between mutant proteins and death
of rod photoreceptors remains incomplete,” says Cideciyan. “What
we know is that there are at least two ways in which rhodopsin mutations
lead to blindness. Some mutations destroy vision in early life and children
are left with only impaired day vision, which then disappears. In other
mutations, night vision can be present throughout life but has a characteristically
slowed recovery time in the dark. Decline of vision is gradual. Naturally
occurring rhodopsin mutant dogs that we studied mimic the latter type
of human disease.”
Cideciyan and colleagues Samuel G. Jacobson, MD, PhD,
the F.M. Kirby Professor in Penn’s Department of Ophthalmology and
Director of the Center for Hereditary Retinal Degenerations at Scheie,
Gustavo D. Aguirre, VMD, PhD, Professor of Medical Genetics
and Ophthalmology at Penn’s School of Veterinary Medicine, and Gregory
M. Acland, BVSc, of Cornell University asked whether modest light levels
cause damage to retinas of the rhodopsin mutant dogs. The investigators
performed the routine clinical procedure of retinal photography in the
dogs. Normal dogs had no ill effects of the procedure. Surprisingly, the
mutant dogs had complete degeneration one month after retinal photography
and only in those regions that were photographed. There were no abnormalities
associated with neighboring regions of the retina that were not photographed.
Further experiments with focal light exposures and cross-sectional retinal
imaging showed that retinal injury was detectable within 30 minutes and
could cause complete retinal degeneration within a month following these
moderate lights.
“Rhodopsin mutant dogs are one of several naturally occurring canine
retinal degenerations which duplicate human hereditary eye diseases,”
comment Aguirre and Acland, who have spent more than 20 years identifying
and investigating inherited veterinary retinal degenerations and their
treatments. “Identifying a light-induced component to the natural
history of retinal degeneration in the rhodopsin mutant dogs means that
now we can test new treatments for value and safety before attempting
the same in human patients.”
When the investigators used lower light exposure levels, the degeneration
process was slower and lasted six months or longer. Even further lowering
of light exposure resulted in retinal injury that could be repaired over
a period of weeks to months.
“It is tempting to speculate that extremely slow recovery of vision
following light exposure observed in patients with rhodopsin mutations
may represent the human equivalent of retinal repair mechanisms observed
in the rhodopsin mutant dogs,” says Cideciyan. “Better understanding
of the components of this repair mechanism may lead to new treatment strategies
based on augmentation of innate repair.”
“The potentially damaging effects of environmental light have been
well-studied and discussed in the past,” adds Jacobson. “Now,
we have clues that a specific subgroup of patients may be far more vulnerable
to light than others. These patients should be identified clinically and
by gene testing and then counseled about this vulnerability. A clinical
trial is definitely indicated.”
The research from the Penn-Cornell investigators ushers in a new era of
eye-disease prevention by considering the interaction of genetics and
environment – in this case exposure to light – on an individual
basis. The investigators recommend that all patients with the clinical
diagnosis of RP should see an RP specialist to determine their family
pattern (the every generation or dominant form is the vulnerable one),
their eye disease pattern by specialized (low-light level) testing, and
the genetic cause of their RP to know whether this research applies to
them and their family members.
Other members of the research team are Tomas Aleman, Alexander Sumaroka,
and Danian Gu from Penn, as well as Susan Pearce-Kelling from Cornell.
The research was sponsored by the National Eye Institute of the National
Institutes of Health, Foundation Fighting Blindness, Macula Vision Research
Foundation, F.M. Kirby Foundation, Macular Disease Foundation, Research
to Prevent Blindness, Mackall Foundation, ONCE International Prize from
Spain, and the Van Sloun Fund.
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