Mechanisms of mutant PDE6 proteins underlying retinal diseases

KN Gopalakrishna, K Boyd, NO Artemyev - Cellular signalling, 2017 - Elsevier
KN Gopalakrishna, K Boyd, NO Artemyev
Cellular signalling, 2017Elsevier
Mutations in PDE6 genes encoding the effector enzymes in rods and cones underlie severe
retinal diseases including retinitis pigmentosa (RP), autosomal dominant congenital
stationary night blindness (adCSNB), and achromatopsia (ACHM). Here we examined a
spectrum of pathogenic missense mutations in PDE6 using the system based on co-
expression of cone PDE6C with its specialized chaperone AIPL1 and the regulatory Pγ
subunit as a potent co-chaperone. We uncovered two mechanisms of PDE6C mutations …
Abstract
Mutations in PDE6 genes encoding the effector enzymes in rods and cones underlie severe retinal diseases including retinitis pigmentosa (RP), autosomal dominant congenital stationary night blindness (adCSNB), and achromatopsia (ACHM). Here we examined a spectrum of pathogenic missense mutations in PDE6 using the system based on co-expression of cone PDE6C with its specialized chaperone AIPL1 and the regulatory Pγ subunit as a potent co-chaperone. We uncovered two mechanisms of PDE6C mutations underlying ACHM: (a) folding defects leading to expression of catalytically inactive proteins and (b) markedly diminished ability of Pγ to co-chaperone mutant PDE6C proteins thereby dramatically reducing the levels of functional enzyme. The mechanism of the Rambusch adCSNB associated with the H258N substitution in PDE6B was probed through the analysis of the model mutant PDE6C-H262N. We identified two interrelated deficits of PDE6C-H262N: disruption of the inhibitory interaction of Pγ with mutant PDE6C that markedly reduced the ability of Pγ to augment the enzyme folding. Thus, we conclude that the Rambusch adCSNB is triggered by low levels of the constitutively active PDE6. Finally, we examined PDE6C-L858V, which models PDE6B-L854V, an RP-linked mutation that alters the protein isoprenyl modification. This analysis suggests that the type of prenyl modifications does not impact the folding of PDE6, but it modulates the enzyme affinity for its trafficking partner PDE6D. Hence, the pathogenicity of PDE6B-L854V likely arises from its trafficking deficiency. Taken together, our results demonstrate the effectiveness of the PDE6C expression system to evaluate pathogenicity and elucidate the mechanisms of PDE6 mutations in retinal diseases.
Elsevier