Chronic Dicer1 deficiency promotes atrophic and neovascular outer retinal pathologies in mice

Author:

Wright Charles B.,Uehara Hironori,Kim Younghee,Yasuma Tetsuhiro,Yasuma Reo,Hirahara Shuichiro,Makin Ryan D.,Apicella Ivana,Pereira Felipe,Nagasaka Yosuke,Narendran Siddharth,Fukuda Shinichi,Albuquerque Romulo,Fowler Benjamin J.,Bastos-Carvalho Ana,Georgel PhilippeORCID,Hatada Izuho,Chang Bo,Kerur Nagaraj,Ambati Balamurali K.,Ambati Jayakrishna,Gelfand Bradley D.ORCID

Abstract

Degeneration of the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) and aberrant blood vessel growth in the eye are advanced-stage processes in blinding diseases such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD), which affect hundreds of millions of people worldwide. Loss of the RNase DICER1, an essential factor in micro-RNA biogenesis, is implicated in RPE atrophy. However, the functional implications of DICER1 loss in choroidal and retinal neovascularization are unknown. Here, we report that two independent hypomorphic mouse strains, as well as a separate model of postnatal RPE-specific DICER1 ablation, all presented with spontaneous RPE degeneration and choroidal and retinal neovascularization. DICER1 hypomorphic mice lacking critical inflammasome components or the innate immune adaptor MyD88 developed less severe RPE atrophy and pathological neovascularization. DICER1 abundance was also reduced in retinas of the JR5558 mouse model of spontaneous choroidal neovascularization. Finally, adenoassociated vector-mediated gene delivery of a truncated DICER1 variant (OptiDicer) reduced spontaneous choroidal neovascularization in JR5558 mice. Collectively, these findings significantly expand the repertoire of DICER1 in preserving retinal homeostasis by preventing both RPE degeneration and pathological neovascularization.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Eye Institute

American Heart Association

HHS | National Institutes of Health

John Templeton Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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