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Super-resolution microscopy reveals photoreceptor-specific subciliary location and function of ciliopathy-associated protein CEP290
Valencia L. Potter, … , Michael A. Robichaux, Theodore G. Wensel
Valencia L. Potter, … , Michael A. Robichaux, Theodore G. Wensel
Published September 14, 2021
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2021;6(20):e145256. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.145256.
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Research Article Cell biology Ophthalmology

Super-resolution microscopy reveals photoreceptor-specific subciliary location and function of ciliopathy-associated protein CEP290

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Abstract

Mutations in the cilium-associated protein CEP290 cause retinal degeneration as part of multiorgan ciliopathies or as retina-specific diseases. The precise location and the functional roles of CEP290 within cilia and, specifically, the connecting cilia (CC) of photoreceptors, remain unclear. We used super-resolution fluorescence microscopy and electron microscopy to localize CEP290 in the CC and in the primary cilia of cultured cells with subdiffraction resolution and to determine effects of CEP290 deficiency in 3 mutant models. Radially, CEP290 localizes in close proximity to the microtubule doublets in the region between the doublets and the ciliary membrane. Longitudinally, it is distributed throughout the length of the CC whereas it is confined to the very base of primary cilia in human retinal pigment epithelium-1 cells. We found Y-shaped links, ciliary substructures between microtubules and membrane, throughout the length of the CC. Severe CEP290 deficiencies in mouse models did not prevent assembly of cilia or cause obvious mislocalization of ciliary components in early stages of degeneration. There were fewer cilia and no normal outer segments in the mutants, but the Y-shaped links were clearly present. These results point to photoreceptor-specific functions of CEP290 essential for CC maturation and stability following the earliest stages of ciliogenesis.

Authors

Valencia L. Potter, Abigail R. Moye, Michael A. Robichaux, Theodore G. Wensel

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Figure 1

The photoreceptor CC.

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The photoreceptor CC.
(A) The photoreceptors are the most posterior cell...
(A) The photoreceptors are the most posterior cells in the neural retina at the back of the eye. (B) Rod photoreceptor cells are distributed across 4 layers of the retina. (C) The CC links the outer segment to the inner segment. The dashed link shows the portion of the CC in the cross-sectional view. The dimensions of the CC are approximately 1100 nm by 300 nm. OS, outer segment; IS, inner segment; ONL, outer nuclear layer; OPL, outer plexiform layer; CC, connecting cilium; BB, basal body; TF, transition fibers; MT, microtubule doublets.

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