Increased H3K27 trimethylation contributes to cone survival in a mouse model of cone dystrophy

Author:

Miller Annie L.,Fuller-Carter Paula I.,Masarini Klaudija,Samardzija Marijana,Carter Kim W.,Rashwan Rabab,Lim Xin Ru,Brunet Alicia A.,Chopra Abha,Ram Ramesh,Grimm Christian,Ueffing Marius,Carvalho Livia S.ORCID,Trifunović Dragana

Abstract

AbstractInherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are a heterogeneous group of blinding disorders, which result in dysfunction or death of the light-sensing cone and rod photoreceptors. Despite individual IRDs (Inherited retinal disease) being rare, collectively, they affect up to 1:2000 people worldwide, causing a significant socioeconomic burden, especially when cone-mediated central vision is affected. This study uses the Pde6ccpfl1 mouse model of achromatopsia, a cone-specific vision loss IRD (Inherited retinal disease), to investigate the potential gene-independent therapeutic benefits of a histone demethylase inhibitor GSK-J4 on cone cell survival. We investigated the effects of GSK-J4 treatment on cone cell survival in vivo and ex vivo and changes in cone-specific gene expression via single-cell RNA sequencing. A single intravitreal GSK-J4 injection led to transcriptional changes in pathways involved in mitochondrial dysfunction, endoplasmic reticulum stress, among other key epigenetic pathways, highlighting the complex interplay between methylation and acetylation in healthy and diseased cones. Furthermore, continuous administration of GSK-J4 in retinal explants increased cone survival. Our results suggest that IRD (Inherited retinal disease)-affected cones respond positively to epigenetic modulation of histones, indicating the potential of this approach in developing a broad class of novel therapies to slow cone degeneration.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Swiss National Science Foundation

The Lindsay & Heather Payne Medical Research Charitable Foundation

Australian Government

Tahija Foundation

Future Health Research and Innovation Fund Scheme

Kerstan Foundation

ProRetina Foundation

University of Western Australia

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cell Biology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Pharmacology,Molecular Biology,Molecular Medicine

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