(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2001;42:3023-3030.)
© 2001
by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
Effect of Rpe65 Knockout on Accumulation of Lipofuscin Fluorophores in the Retinal Pigment Epithelium
Martin L. Katz1 and
T. Michael Redmond2
1 From the University of Missouri School of Medicine, Mason Eye Institute, Columbia; and the
2 Laboratory of Retinal Cell and Molecular Biology, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
 |
Abstract
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PURPOSE. In all mammalian species examined to date the retinal pigment
epithelium (RPE) has been found to accumulate autofluorescent lysosomal
storage bodies (lipofuscin) during senescence. Substantial evidence
indicates that retinoids in the RPEretina complex play a major role
in RPE lipofuscin formation. Indeed, at least one RPE lipofuscin
fluorophore is derived in part from vitamin A aldehyde. However, the
precise mechanisms by which retinoids modulate RPE lipofuscin
accumulation have not been elucidated. In mice without a functional
Rpe65 gene, isomerization of all-trans-
to 11-cis-retinol is blocked. Experiments were performed
to determine whether this impairment of retinoid metabolism alters RPE
lipofuscin accumulation.
METHODS. RPE lipofuscin fluorophore content was compared in 12- to 13-month-old
Rpe65+/+,
Rpe65+/-, and
Rpe65-/- mice. Lipofuscin fluorophore
content was determined using quantitative fluorometric measurements.
RPE lipofuscin content was also estimated with quantitative
ultrastructural techniques.
RESULTS. In the Rpe65-/- mice, RPE lipofuscin
fluorophore accumulation was almost abolished. In addition, a
significantly reduced accumulation of lipofuscin fluorophores was also
observed in the Rpe65+/-
animals. The inability of the RPE ofRpe65-/- mice to supply
11-cis-retinal from the RPE to the retinal
photoreceptors was accompanied by a massive accumulation of lipid
droplets in the RPE that appeared to contain substantial amounts of
retinoids.
CONCLUSIONS. These findings indicate that formation of RPE lipofuscin fluorophores
is almost completely dependent on a normal visual cycle. The absence of
retinal (both all-trans and 11-cis) in
Rpe65 knockout mice drastically reduced formation of
lipofuscin fluorophores in these animals. Even an excessive
accumulation of retinyl fatty acid esters in the RPE of
Rpe65 knockout mice did not contribute to lipofuscin
accumulation.
 |
Introduction
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The retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) performs functions
essential for photoreceptor cell function and survival, including
participation in the retinoid visual cycle, the process by which the
visual pigment chromophore, 11-cis-retinal, is
photoisomerized to the all-trans configuration during visual
transduction and then enzymatically reisomerized to the
11-cis isomer.1
2
Impairment of RPE functions
appears to be involved in a number of inherited retinal degenerative
disorders3
4
5
6
as well as in age-related retinal
degeneration (AMD), one of the most prevalent causes of serious visual
impairment in developed countries.7
It is well known that
the RPE accumulates massive amounts of autofluorescent lysosomal
storage bodies (lipofuscin) during the lifetime of the
individual,8
9
10
and the build-up of these intracellular
inclusions has been implicated in AMD.11
Therefore,
understanding the mechanisms of RPE lipofuscin formation may eventually
provide the basis for preventing vision loss due to AMD.
Several lines of evidence indicate that vitamin A (retinoids) plays a
key role in RPE lipofuscin formation. Animals deprived of retinol
necessary for visual pigment synthesis show very little age-related
accumulation of lipofuscin in the RPE.12
13
Inhibition of
lysosomal protein degradation by the RPE results in a massive
accumulation of autofluorescent lysosomal storage bodies in the
RPE.14
However, retinol deprivation before protease
inhibitor treatment prevents development of lipofuscin-like
autofluorescence in these inclusions.15
The most direct
evidence that retinoids are involved in RPE lipofuscin formation was
the demonstration that
N-retinylidene-N-retinylethanolamine
(A2E), one of the RPE lipofuscin fluorophores, can be formed by a
reaction between all-trans-retinal and
ethanolamine.16
Thus, it is likely that
all-trans-retinal, generated during visual pigment bleaching
and regeneration, is the key retinoid in lipofuscin formation. This
mechanism is further illuminated in Stargardt disease, an early-onset
form of macular degeneration in which massive accumulation of
lipofuscin is evident from childhood, and in abcr knockout
mice that also demonstrate early and massive accumulation of
lipofuscin. The molecular defect in both these situations is a
defective or absent gene encoding Rim protein (RmP).17
18
RmP is an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter protein specific to
rod photoreceptor outer segment discs whose apparent substrates are
all-trans-retinal19
and/or
N-retinylidene phosphatidylethanolamine
(APE),18
a condensation product of retinal with PE that is
the apparent precursor of A2PE and, ultimately, of
A2E.20
21
22
Impaired removal of either or both of these
products from the photoreceptor allows for increased formation of the
A2E component of RPE lipofuscin.
Although retinoids are clearly involved in RPE lipofuscin formation,
the necessity for them to traverse the visual cycle to promote
lipofuscin accumulation is not clear. RPE65, a protein preferentially
and abundantly expressed in the RPE,23
24
appears to
perform an essential role in transformation of
all-trans-retinol to 11-cis-retinal in the visual
cycle.25
The absence of functional RPE65 protein severely
disrupts the visual cycle, resulting in a deficiency of visual pigment
and in an accumulation of retinyl esters in the RPE.25
Rpe65 knockout mice were used to test the hypothesis that RPE
lipofuscin fluorophore formation requires the conversion of
all-trans-retinol to 11-cis- and
all-trans-retinals.
 |
Materials and Methods
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Rpe65 Knockout Mice
Mice in which the Rpe65 gene was specifically
disrupted were generated using gene targeting, as described
previously.25
These knockout (-/-) mice do not express
RPE65 protein. Wild-type (+/+) mice and mice heterozygous
for the Rpe65 gene disruption (+/-) were used as control
subjects. Mice were genotyped using previously described PCR reaction
conditions.26
The mice were housed under 12 hour cyclic light-dark and were fed a
standard commercial mouse diet ad libitum. Illumination was provided by
40-W cool-white fluorescent lamps. Mean illuminance measured on the
cage bottoms was 15 to 30 lux during the light phase of each daily
cycle. Mice were 12 to 13 months of age at the time the tissues were
collected. All procedures involving animals conformed to the ARVO
Statement for the Use of Animals in Ophthalmic and Vision Research.
Fluorescence Microscopy and Microfluorometry
Quantitative microfluorometry was used to assess the amount of
lipofuscin-specific autofluorescence (excitation maximum 380440 nm;
emission maximum 590650 nm)27
28
29
in the RPEs of
Rpe65+/+,
Rpe65+/-, and
Rpe65-/- mice. The animals were killed by
carbon dioxide inhalation and the eyes were immediately enucleated.
Enucleations were performed between 6 and 7 hours after the onset of
the light phase of the daily light cycle. One eye of each mouse was
prepared for either microfluorometry or fluorescence photomicrography,
as described previously.30
Quantitative fluorescence
emission intensity measurements were performed with a microscope
(Photomicroscope I; Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) equipped for
epi-illumination and photometry. Fluorescence photomicrography was
performed with another microscope (Axiophot; Zeiss). Detailed
descriptions of the methods used for the microphotometric measurements
and photomicrography are published elsewhere.30
In preparations from Rpe65-/- mice,
significant green fluorescence emission was observed from fatty acid
esters of retinol that had accumulated in the RPE.31
However, unlike the lipofuscin fluorescence, the retinyl ester
fluorescence was bleached quite rapidly under the illumination from the
microscope.31
Each fluorescence measurement was taken only
after the retinyl ester fluorescence had completely faded, which
typically occurred after less than 10 seconds in the field of
illumination. Control experiments indicated that no change in the
lipofuscin-specific fluorescence intensity occurred during a similar
period of exposure.
RPE wholemounts were also prepared as described above for fluorescence
photomicrography used to document RPE retinyl ester fluorescence.
Fluorescence photomicrographs were made with a microscope equipped for
epifluorescence (Axiophot; Zeiss). Fluorescent emissions were
stimulated with light from a 50-W high-pressure mercury vapor source.
Examination and photography of the specimens for retinyl ester-specific
fluorescence were performed, using a x40 objective (Plan-Neofluor)
with a 1.30 numerical aperture, a 395440-nm band-pass exciter filter,
a chromatic beam splitter (FT 460), and a barrier filter (LP 470; all
from Zeiss). To decrease the rate of bleaching of the vitamin A
by the excitation light beam, a 1.0-optical-density (OD)
neutral-density filter was placed in front of the light source for
documentation of vitamin A fluorescence. Photomicrography was performed
with Elitechrome 100 film (Eastman Kodak; Rochester, NY), with
a fixed exposure time.
Light and Electron Microscopy
Eyes from mice of each genotype were prepared for light and
electron microscopic analysis. Immediately after enucleation, the eyes
were fixed and dissected, as described previously.9
30
After primary fixation, each sample was dissected to obtain a strip of
the eyecup along the superiorinferior meridian with the optic nerve
head at its center. The tissue was then subjected to secondary fixation
in 1% osmium tetroxide and embedded in an epoxy resin.9
Semithin (0.5 µm thick) and ultrathin sections were cut from a
central region of each retina centered on the superiorinferior
meridian approximately 600 µm superior to the optic nerve head. The
0.5-µm-thick sections were mounted on slides, stained with toluidine
blue, and photographed with a microscope (Axiophot, Zeiss). The
ultrathin sections were stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate
and examined with an electron microscope (1200EX; JEOL Tokyo, Japan). A
series of electron micrographs of contiguous nonoverlapping regions of
the RPE from each sample were made at a magnification of x5000. These
micrographs were obtained to represent a minimum of 175 µm of RPE
length (measured along the RPE basal lamina) from each eye.
The mice used in this study have substantial amounts of melanin pigment
in the RPE. Unfortunately, the lipofuscin and melanin in these cells
were not distinct enough from one another ultrastructurally to enable
them to be quantified separately. Therefore, the combined lipofuscin
plus melanin content of the RPE was determined for each animal. RPE
lipofuscin plus melanin contents were measured from the micrographs
with an image analysis system (Metamorph; Universal Imaging, West
Chester, PA), to determine the total cross-sectional area of these
organelles in each micrograph. Lipofuscin plus melanin in the RPE was
defined ultrastructurally as all electron-dense inclusion bodies
greater than 0.20 µm in diameter that were distinct from RPE
phagosomes, mitochondria, and lipid droplets.30
Phagosomes
in late stages of degradation have ultrastructural features similar to
those of lipofuscin. However, the tissues were collected at a time in
the light cycle when RPE phagosome content is quite
low.32
33
Thus, any contribution of late-stage phagosomes
to the lipofuscin content determinations was minimal. Lipid droplets
were identified by their uniform light electron density and round
profiles. RPE lipofuscin plus melanin contents were determined as the
total cross-sectional area of the combined inclusion types per unit of
RPE length.
Statistical Analyses
Analysis of variance was used to assess whether Rpe65
genotype was associated with differences in RPE lipofuscin content.
Comparisons between each pair of genotypes were performed using the
Student-Newman-Keuls test.34
 |
Results
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RPE Lipofuscin Autofluorescence
In mice, as in other animals, there is a progressive increase in
RPE lipofuscin content during senescence. RPE lipofuscin-specific
fluorescence was compared among Rpe65+/+,
Rpe65+/-, and
Rpe65-/- mice that were 12 to 13 months
old. Figure 1
shows representative fluorescence micrographs of the RPE of wild-type
and homozygous knockout mice. Lipofuscin-specific autofluorescence was
dramatically reduced in the knockout compared with the wild-type RPE.
Quantitative microfluorometry showed that animals that were homozygous
for the Rpe65 knockout allele had mean RPE
lipofuscin-specific autofluorescence that was only 8.7% of that of
age-matched mice that were homozygous for the wild-type
Rpe65 allele (P < 0.001; Figs. 1
2
). RPE lipofuscin-specific fluorescence intensity was also reduced in
mice heterozygous for the Rpe65 targeted disruption, but to
a lesser degree than in homozygous knockout mice (Fig. 2)
. Mean
lipofuscin fluorescence intensity in the heterozygotes was 65% of that
in the homozygous wild-type mice (P < 0.005).

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Figure 1. Fluorescence micrographs of RPE wholemounts from (A)
Rpe65+/+ and (B)
Rpe65-/- mice. Micrographs were obtained
using a filter combination optimized for visualizing lipofuscin
fluorescence. Scale bar, 100 µm.
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Figure 2. Quantitative measures of RPE lipofuscin-specific fluorescence in mice
with the three genotypes. Bars represent mean ± SEM of
fluorescence intensities determined relative to a standard.
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Retinal Morphology and Ultrastructural Analysis of RPE Lipofuscin
Content
Despite the absence of a functional Rpe65 gene in the
knockout mice, there was only a moderate loss of photoreceptor cells in
these animals relative to the normal control animals (Fig. 3) . The mean number of photoreceptor nuclei in 100-µm-long
cross-sections of the retinas were 169 ± 13 in the
Rpe65+/+ mice compared with 110 ± 10
in the Rpe65-/- animals. In addition,
although there was no visual pigment chromophore in the
Rpe65-/- mice, the rod outer segment
morphology of the remaining photoreceptors in these animals appeared
normal (Figs. 3
4)
.

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Figure 3. Representative light micrographs of the centralsuperior retinas of
(A) Rpe65+/+ and (B)
Rpe65-/- mice. Scale bar, 50 µm.
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Figure 4. Representative electron micrographs of the RPE of (A)
Rpe65+/+ and (B)
Rpe65-/- mice. Arrows:
Representative electron-dense inclusion bodies that were measured to
obtain the data shown in Figure 3
. Numerous large lipid droplets (L)
not normally present in the RPE were observed in the
Rpe65-/- mice. Scale bar, 2 µm.
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Although its characteristic autofluorescence is an identifying feature
of lipofuscin that accumulates in the RPE during senescence, it is
possible that not all components of lipofuscin are
autofluorescent.15
35
Therefore, ultrastructural analyses
were performed in an attempt to assess whether Rpe65
genotype influences the accumulation of not only the fluorescent
constituents of lipofuscin, but of the total volume of lipofuscin in
the RPE. Unlike in humans,8
the lipofuscin in the mice was
not distinct enough from RPE melanin to allow it to be quantified
independently from the latter organelles. Thus, the combined RPE
lipofuscin and melanin contents were determined in the
Rpe65+/+,
Rpe65+/-, and
Rpe65-/- mice. The
Rpe65-/- animals had a mean
lipofuscin-plus-melanin content that was 26% less than that in the
wild-type mice (P < 0.01; Figs. 4
5
). The mean RPE content of these organelles in the
Rpe+/- mice was intermediate between those
of the Rpe65+/+ and
Rpe65-/- animals, although the
differences between the Rpe65+/- mice and
the other two groups did not meet the P < 0.05
criterion level for statistical significance.

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Figure 5. Quantitative ultrastructural measures of RPE lipofuscin plus melanin
content in mice with the three genotypes. Bars indicated mean ±
SEM of values for each group.
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Accumulation of Lipid Droplets in the RPE of
Rpe65-/- Mice
Under normal conditions, the RPEs of most mammalian retinas,
including that of the mouse, contain few if any lipid droplets.
However, in the Rpe65-/- mice, numerous
large lipid droplets were present throughout the RPE (Fig. 4)
. The size
and number of the droplets were greater in the 1-year-old animals
analyzed in this study than in the 15-week-old animals analyzed in the
original description of the Rpe65-deficient phenotype. No
such lipid droplets were observed in the
Rpe65+/+ or
Rpe65+/- mice (Fig. 4)
. Redmond et
al.25
concluded that the accumulation of lipid droplets in
the knockout animals correlates with an overaccumulation of retinyl
esters but did not present direct evidence that the lipid droplets
contain retinyl esters.
RPE Vitamin A Autofluorescence
To determine whether the lipid droplets in the
Rpe65-/- animals were a reservoir for
storage of excessive retinyl esters, RPE wholemounts were evaluated
with fluorescence microscopy to assess the presence and distribution of
retinolretinyl esters. Under conditions optimized for visualization
of retinolretinyl esterspecific autofluorescence, flatmounted RPEs
of the Rpe65-/- mice had numerous
spherical inclusions that produced a bright green emission when the
samples were illuminated with UV-blue light (Fig. 6A)
. The sizes and distribution of these fluorescent spherical inclusions
were consistent with sizes and distributions of the lipid droplets seen
with electron microscopy (Fig. 4B)
. No such inclusions were observed in
the Rpe65+/+ or Rpe65+/-mice (Fig. 6)
. In mice with the latter genotypes,
only a faint yellow lipofuscin-specific autofluorescence could be seen
under these conditions (Fig. 6)
.

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Figure 6. Fluorescence micrographs of RPE wholemounts from (A)
Rpe65-/- and (B)
Rpe65+/+ mice. Micrographs were obtained
under conditions optimized for visualization of vitamin A fluorescence.
Scale bar, 100 µm.
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 |
Discussion
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Dietary vitamin A deficiency has long been known to dramatically
retard lipofuscin accumulation in the rat RPE.12
Since
this discovery, a growing body of evidence has accumulated indicating
that visual cycle retinoids are directly involved in the formation of
at least the autofluorescent constituents of RPE
lipofuscin.12
13
15
16
21
35
36
37
38
However, questions remain
as to the precise mechanisms by which retinoids regulate RPE lipofuscin
accumulation. In this study, absence of a complete visual cycle, as
evident in the Rpe65-deficient mouse, drastically reduced
the accumulation of lipofuscin in mice, despite an excessive
accumulation of vitamin A esters in the RPE. Thus, cycling between
all-trans- and 11-cis-retinal was necessary for
significant accumulation of lipofuscin to occur. These data are
consistent with the report that impaired removal of
all-trans-retinal from the photoreceptors in
abcr-knockout mice is accompanied by a dramatically
increased accumulation of A2E.18
The dramatically
decreased lipofuscin fluorophore accumulation could not be attributed
to photoreceptor cell loss; the densities of photoreceptor cells in 12-
to 13-month-old Rpe65 knockout mice were approximately 65%
of control densities, and the remaining photoreceptors retained
normal-appearing outer segments. These findings are consistent with
previous demonstrations that photoreceptor cell number and morphology
are well conserved after long-term dietary vitamin A deprivation that
results in depletion of retinoids from the retina.39
40
A model to explain the role of retinoids in RPE lipofuscin formation
was proposed a number of years ago.21
Shown in Figure 7
is an updated model that takes into account the results of the present
study and the evidence that abcr mutations can influence RPE
lipofuscin accumulation. In this model, a fraction of the
all-trans-retinal generated in the photoreceptor outer
segments during photopigment bleaching reacts with amines in the outer
segments to generate precursors of RPE lipofuscin
fluorophores.21
22
These compounds are taken up by the RPE
during normal outer segment phagocytosis where they are modified and
accumulate in secondary lysosomes.

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Figure 7. Proposed model for roles of Rpe65 and retinoids in
RPE lipofuscin fluorophore formation. At-RDH,
all-trans-retinol dehydrogenase; LRAT,
lecithin-retinol acyltransferase; 11-cis RDH,
11-cis-retinol dehydrogenase; CRALBP,
cellular retinaldehyde-binding protein. RPE65 is required for the
generation of 11-cis-retinol from
all-trans-retinyl esters present in the RPE, although
the precise role of RPE65 in this process has not been elucidated.
|
|
A prediction of this model is that disruption of the vitamin A visual
cycle would result in a reduction in RPE lipofuscin fluorophore
formation. That has been shown to be true: Rpe65 knockout
mice, incapable of isomerizing all-trans-retinol into
11-cis-retinal,25
show very little lipofuscin
fluorophore accumulation. In other words, absence of retinal flux
prevents accumulation of lipofuscin fluorophores. Unable to be
isomerized, large amounts of retinyl fatty acid esters accumulate in
the RPE of the knockout mice,25
especially in the aged
animals used in this study. These lipid droplets are not normally
present in the RPE of mice, and retinoid fluorescence and biochemical
measurements show that they contain retinyl esters. Retinoid-containing
lipid droplets also form in the RPE of mice administered large doses of
all-trans-retinyl ester,41
suggesting that the
formation of lipid droplets in the knockout mice is secondary to
excessive accumulation of retinoids in the RPE and is an indirect
effect of the genetic defect. It is clear that
all-trans-retinyl esters, even at high levels, do not
participate in the generation of RPE lipofuscin fluorophores. RPE
lipofuscin is composed of a mixture of fluorophores, including
A2E.16
27
The latter compound makes only a small
contribution to total RPE lipofuscin fluorescence.27
Because lipofuscin-specific fluorescence is almost totally absent in
the Rpe65-/- mice, the findings support
the hypothesis that all the many different lipofuscin
fluorophores,27
and not just the A2E that has been
identified,16
are derived from reactions of retinal with
other photoreceptor outer segment amines.
Previous studies have suggested that not all the molecular constituents
of RPE lipofuscin may be autofluorescent and that at least some of the
nonfluorescent components may accumulate in RPE lysosomes, independent
of the retinoid-derived fluorophores.15
27
The relative
contribution of nonfluorescent components of RPE lipofuscin-like
inclusions can be assessed ultrastructurally, as was attempted in this
study. However, unlike in the human RPE,42
lipofuscin
granules in the mouse RPE were not ultrastructurally distinct from
melanin granules. Thus, to test the hypothesis that lipofuscin volume
and fluorescence are reduced in the knockout mice, we measured the
combined melanin-lipofuscin content of the RPE. Consistent with the
fluorescence measurements, the combined volumes of these organelles
were reduced in the knockout mice. However, because of the contribution
due to melanin, it was not possible to determine the degree to which
this reduction correlated with the magnitude of reduction in
fluorescence intensity. To determine more precisely the degree to which
lipofuscin volume is reduced as a result of the Rpe65
mutation, the study should be repeated in albino mice homozygous for
Rpe65 disruption (not currently available). The results of
the present study allow us to conclude, however, that even if reduced
amounts of secondary lysosomes accumulate during senescence in the
Rpe65-/- mice, these secondary lysosomes
do not contain autofluorescent retinoid derivatives.
It is possible that other molecular constituents (e.g., lipids,
proteins) of the photoreceptor outer segments, in addition to the
retinoid-derived compounds, are involved in RPE lipofuscin fluorophore
formation. This possibility is supported by studies showing that
specific elimination of photoreceptors from the retina early in life
results in greatly reduced accumulation of lipofuscin fluorophores
during senescence.43
44
Because the photoreceptors
degenerate slowly in the Rpe65 knockout mice, it could be
argued that the reduced lipofuscin fluorophore content was due at least
in part to reduced RPE phagocytosis of nonretinoid precursors from the
outer segments. This seems unlikely, however. The photoreceptors
degenerate only gradually in the Rpe65 knockout
mice25
and significant numbers remain in the 12- to
13-month-old animals, whose RPE still contain outer segmentderived
phagosomes. If phagocytosis of these retinoid-deficient outer segments
contributed significantly to RPE lipofuscin fluorophore formation,
fluorophore accumulation would not be expected to be virtually
abolished in the knockout mice as it was.
In conclusion, the absence of a visual cycle flux of 11-cis-
and all-trans-retinal, even in the presence of a large
amount of retinyl esters in the RPE, reduces the formation of
lipofuscin in the RPE. Thus, it is possible that less severe mutations
in RPE65, not otherwise causing retinal dystrophy but
instead partially reducing the efficiency of 11-cis-retinal
production in the visual cycle, may confer a protective benefit. Such a
benefit is evident from light damage studies in the mouse
Rpe65 L450M variant45
and the Rpe65
knockout mouse.46
Similarly, allelic variation in
RPE65 may contribute to individual differences in rates of
lipofuscin accumulation and in risk for developing AMD.
 |
Acknowledgements
|
|---|
The authors thank Laura Marler for assistance with the
ultrastructural analyses and Shirley Yu for genotyping the animals used
in the study.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Supported in part by an unrestricted grant from Research to Prevent
Blindness, Inc.
Submitted for publication March 23, 2001; revised June 11 and July 17,
2001; accepted July 26, 2001.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page
charge payment. This article must therefore be marked
"advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734
solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Martin L. Katz, University of Missouri School of
Medicine, Mason Eye Institute, One Hospital Drive, Columbia, MO 65212.
katzm{at}health.missouri.edu
 |
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