Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder that results in retinal degeneration, obesity, cognitive impairment, polydactyly, renal abnormalities, and hypogenitalism. Of the 12 known BBS genes, BBS1 is the most commonly mutated, and a single missense mutation (M390R) accounts for Ϸ80% of BBS1 cases. To gain insight into the function of BBS1, we generated a Bbs1 M390R/M390R knockin mouse model. Mice homozygous for the M390R mutation recapitulated aspects of the human phenotype, including retinal degeneration, male infertility, and obesity. The obese mutant mice were hyperphagic and hyperleptinemic and exhibited reduced locomotor activity but no elevation in mean arterial blood pressure. Morphological evaluation of Bbs1 mutant brain neuroanatomy revealed ventriculomegaly of the lateral and third ventricles, thinning of the cerebral cortex, and reduced volume of the corpus striatum and hippocampus. Similar abnormalities were also observed in the brains of Bbs2 ؊/؊ , Bbs4 ؊/؊ , and Bbs6 ؊/؊ mice, establishing these neuroanatomical defects as a previously undescribed BBS mouse model phenotype. Ultrastructural examination of the ependymal cell cilia that line the enlarged third ventricle of the Bbs1 mutant brains showed that, whereas the 9 ؉ 2 arrangement of axonemal microtubules was intact, elongated cilia and cilia with abnormally swollen distal ends were present. Together with data from transmission electron microscopy analysis of photoreceptor cell connecting cilia, the Bbs1 M390R mutation does not affect axonemal structure, but it may play a role in the regulation of cilia assembly and/or function.B ardet-Biedl syndrome [BBS, Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) 209900] is a genetically heterogeneous autosomal recessive disorder characterized by obesity, retinal degeneration, polydactyly, cognitive impairment, hypogenitalism, and renal abnormalities, as well as susceptibility to hypertension, diabetes mellitus, olfaction deficits, and congenital cardiac defects. Twelve BBS genes (BBS1-12) have been identified to date (1-14). They encode a set of proteins thought to play a role in the structure or function of cilia, basal bodies, and intracellular transport (15, 16). Mutations in BBS1 are the most commonly observed in BBS. A single missense mutation that converts a methionine codon to an arginine codon (M390R) accounts for Ϸ80% of BBS1 mutations and is involved in 25% of all BBS cases (5). The M390R mutation occurs near predicted regions of coiled-coil protein domains and lies within a conserved predicted WD40-like protein motif. These protein motifs are involved in such basic biological processes as signal transduction, RNA synthesis/processing, chromatin assembly, vesicular trafficking, cytoskeletal assembly, cell cycle control, and apoptosis (17).Recently, BBS1, BBS2, BBS4, BBS5, BBS7, BBS8, and BBS9 were shown to form a stable Ϸ450-kDa protein complex called the BBSome in cultured retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells and mouse testes. Depletion of some components of the BBSome, ...
Progressive rod-cone degeneration (prcd) is a late-onset, autosomal recessive photoreceptor degeneration of dogs and a homolog for some forms of human retinitis pigmentosa (RP). Previously, the disease-relevant interval was reduced to a 106-kb region on CFA9, and a common phenotype-specific haplotype was identified in all affected dogs from several different breeds and breed varieties. Screening of a canine retinal EST library identified partial cDNAs for novel candidate genes in the disease-relevant interval. The complete cDNA of one of these, PRCD, was cloned in dog, human, and mouse. The gene codes for a 54-amino-acid (aa) protein in dog and human and a 53-aa protein in the mouse; the first 24 aa, coded for by exon 1, are highly conserved in 14 vertebrate species. A homozygous mutation (TGC --> TAC) in the second codon shows complete concordance with the disorder in 18 different dog breeds/breed varieties tested. The same homozygous mutation was identified in a human patient from Bangladesh with autosomal recessive RP. Expression studies support the predominant expression of this gene in the retina, with equal expression in the retinal pigment epithelium, photoreceptor, and ganglion cell layers. This study provides strong evidence that a mutation in the novel gene PRCD is the cause of autosomal recessive retinal degeneration in both dogs and humans.
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