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    Adv Exp Med Biol. 2010;664:39-46. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4419-1399-9_5.

    The function of oligomerization-incompetent RDS in rods.

    Source

    Department of Cell Biology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma, OK 73126-0901, USA.

    Abstract

    The photoreceptor-specific tetraspanin glycoprotein RDS (retinal degeneration slow) is associated with many forms of inherited retinal disease. RDS shares features in common with other tetraspanin proteins, including the existence of a large intradiscal D2 loop containing several cysteines. While these cysteines are used only for intramolecular disulfide bonds in most tetraspanins, RDS expresses a seventh, unpaired cysteine (C150) used for intermolecular disulfide bonding in the formation of large RDS oligomers. To study oligomerization-dependent vs. oligomerization-independent RDS functions in rods, we generated a transgenic mouse line harboring a point mutation that replaces this Cys with Ser (C150S), leading to the expression of an RDS protein that cannot form intermolecular disulfide bonds. The mouse opsin promoter (MOP) was used to direct C150S RDS expression specifically in rods in these transgenic mice (MOP-T). Here we report improvement in scotopic ERGs in MOP-T/rds ( +/- ) mice (compared to non-transgenic rds ( +/- ) controls) and the appearance of malformed outer segments (OSs) in MOP-T mice that do not express native RDS (MOP-T/rds ( -/- )). These results suggest that while normal OS structure and function require RDS oligomerization, some RDS function is retained in the absence of C150. Since one of the functions of other tetraspanin proteins is to promote assembly of a membrane microdomain known as the "tetraspanin web", future studies may investigate whether assembly of this web is one of RDS's oligomerization-independent functions.

    PMID:
    20238000
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC3161506
    Free PMC Article

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