Abstract
Fam151b is a mammalian homologue of the C. elegans menorin gene, which is involved in neuronal branching. The International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium (IMPC) aims to knock out every gene in the mouse and comprehensively phenotype the mutant animals. This project identified Fam151b homozygous knock-out mice as having retinal degeneration. We show they have no photoreceptor function from eye opening, as demonstrated by a lack of electroretinograph (ERG) response. Histological analysis shows that during development of the eye the correct number of cells are produced and that the layers of the retina differentiate normally. However, after eye opening at P14, Fam151b mutant eyes exhibit signs of retinal stress and rapidly lose photoreceptor cells. We have mutated the second mammalian menorin homologue, Fam151a, and homozygous mutant mice have no discernible phenotype. Sequence analysis indicates that the FAM151 proteins are members of the PLC-like phosphodiesterase superfamily. However, the substrates and function of the proteins remains unknown.
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Introduction
The retina is the light sensitive tissue located in the posterior eye. Photoreceptor cells within the retina are responsible for converting light signals into electrical signals, and loss of these cells is a leading cause of blindness in humans. In the course of diseases such as retinitis pigmentosa (RP), rod and cone photoreceptor cells are slowly lost, beginning at the peripheral retina and moving centrally1. Multiple mutant genes in humans can cause RP, and many of these have counterpart mouse models2. In this paper we describe a novel mouse model of retinal degeneration which has early and rapid loss of photoreceptor cells due to loss of function of a largely uncharacterised gene. The International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium (IMPC) is a worldwide collaborative effort to generate lines of mice, each with a loss of function mutation in a single gene, and to comprehensively phenotype the lines3,4. The ultimate aim is to catalogue the function of every gene in the mouse genome in order to contribute to the understanding of fundamental mammalian biology and to generate models for human disease. Many institutions participate and follow an agreed pipeline for the phenotypic analysis of the mice, known as IMPReSS (International Mouse Phenotyping Resource of Standardised Screen). The analyses include growth, morphological, behavioural, metabolic and sensory phenotypes over a 15 week period, and followed post-mortem by examination of haematology, immunology, clinical chemistry and gross pathology. At 15 weeks of age mutant mice undergo slit lamp examination and ophthalmoscopy to investigate the gross morphology of the eye.
As part of this study a novel gene, Fam151b, was mutated and the mice analysed through the IMPC pipeline. Fam151b knockout mice were found to have abnormal retina morphology and no other observed phenotype. Here we follow up these findings with a detailed histological and functional analysis of this disease model. In addition we have mutated the paralogous gene, Fam151a. No retinal phenotype was observed in Fam151a mutant mice, nor was the Fam151b phenotype enhanced in double mutant animals.
Fam151a and b are mammalian homologues of the C.elegans gene menorin (mnr-1)5. This gene was identified as affected in mutant worms with disrupted dendritic branching in somatosensory neurons; the 90° menorah-like branch pattern observed in control worms was lost in mutants. Mutations in other genes that result in a similar phenotypes, and subsequent biochemistry, identified SAX7 (the C. elegans homologue of L1CAM) and the leucine rich repeat transmembrane receptor, DMA-1, as forming a genetic and molecular complex with MNR-1 which is necessary for dendritic branching.
Results
Menorin, FAM151A and B are members of the GDPD/PLCD superfamily
We analysed the amino acid sequence of FAM151B to identify similarities with proteins of known function. A search of the UniRef 50 database6 shows the FAM151 family to be widely distributed in animals, including C.elegans, as noted above, and Drosophila, and is annotated in Pfam as containing the domain of unknown function (DUF) 2181. We used the remote homology detection server HHPred7 using a profile from multiple FAM151 alignments to find more divergent homologues. HHPred searches with FAM151 family matched the Phospholipase D domain of a spider (Sicarius terrosus) toxin (PDB-ID: 4Q6X) with a highly significant E-value of 1.4 × 10−5 8. Moreover, in support of this, the next most statistically significant matches were to additional members of the Phospholipase D and glycerophosphodiester phosphodiesterase (GDPD) families (Fig. 1). These proteins are all members of the PLC-like phosphodiesterase superfamily of enzymes. PLC-like phosphodiesterases contain a TIM barrel fold, first described in triosephosphate isomerase but found in many proteins, and contain an evolutionarily conserved active site (Fig. 1) crucially also conserved in menorin and FAM151A and B. These different enzymes hydrolyse phosphodiester bonds of a large number of different substrates, ranging from Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) protein anchors (in GDPD family) to sphingolipid and lysolipid (in Phospholipase D spider toxins8,9,10,11.
FAM151B has a single DUF2181 domain, as does menorin. In FAM151A the DUF domain is duplicated, but the critical active site residues in the C-terminal domain are missing suggesting that this second domain lacks enzymatic activity. Most vertebrates have orthologues of both FAM151A and B, but Medaka is one exception and appears to have only FAM151B.
The expression patterns of the two Fam151 paralogues are quite different. Fam151a expression in the mouse is undetectable in most tissues, but is highly expressed in the intestine, kidney and spleen. In contrast, Fam151b is found expressed at low levels in most tissues including the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE), retina, iris, ciliary body, lens and cornea. (BioGPS: www.biogps.org).
Fam151b knockout mice exhibit early and rapid photoreceptor loss
Fam151b mutant mice containing a LacZ reporter inserted into intron 2 and a deletion of exon 3 (Fam151btm1b(EUCOMM)Hmgu hereafter Fam151bKO) were derived as described in the Methods. The insertion includes a polyadenylation site, and the deletion results in any mRNA from which the insertion has been spliced out having a frameshift and termination of translation 15 codons further. Phenotyping homozygous mutant mice through the IMPReSS pipeline identified a degenerative retinal phenotype at 15 weeks, characterised by patchy pigmentation of the retina, compared to the evenly coloured pink retina of control mice. We examined homozygous mice earlier, at 11 weeks, and also observed a patchwork pattern from fundal imaging indicative of retinal degeneration, not present in wild type litter mates (Fig. 2a). Histological analysis of the eyes revealed a severe reduction in the length of the outer segments of the photoreceptors, and in the number of the nuclei of the photoreceptor cells, found in the outer nuclear layer, indicating a substantial loss of photoreceptors. (Fig. 2b). The other retinal layers appear to be unaffected. To test for retinal function we carried out electroretinogram (ERG) analysis on the mutant mice, which confirmed a loss of photoreceptor function, shown by a greatly reduced scotopic a-wave (Fig. 2c).
We analysed Fam151b mutant and control eyes at several ages to determine when the loss of photoreceptor cells occurred. Eyes were taken at postnatal day 11 (P11) and examined by histology (Fig. 3). Mutant mice at this age had comparable numbers of nuclei in the outer nuclei layer to wild type littermates, and the remainder of the retina also appears normal. The mutant eyes appear to develop normally prior to eye opening at P14. We stained the retinal sections to label glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), a widely used marker of retinal stress12, and found no upregulation of this protein at P11.
We compared Fam151bKO/KO and wild type littermates at P15. As shown in Fig. 3, mutant mice still have comparable numbers of photoreceptor nuclei to wild type littermates. However, at this stage, there is an upregulation of GFAP expression, indicative of retinal stress. By P21 Fam151bKO/KO mice have a dramatically reduced outer nuclei layer (Fig. 3) indicating a loss of photoreceptor cells along with GFAP upregulation.
We performed ERG on P15 mice to assess whether the photoreceptors present have any function prior to their degeneration. As shown in Fig. 4a, Fam151bKO/KO mice exhibit a significantly reduced scotopic (dark adapted) a-wave when stimulated with a high intensity light source (10 cd.s/m2) although at standard light intensity, in both dark adapted and light adapted eyes, (3 cd.s/m2) whilst the a-wave amplitude appears reduced it does not reach significance at p = 0.0534 and 0.487931 for dark and light adapted eyes respectively. This suggests that some of the photoreceptors are able to respond to a light stimulus, however the majority cannot and thus produces a lower a-wave amplitude. This may mean that the photoreceptor cells develop and can function normally but degenerate very quickly after eye opening. By P21 there is little to no a-wave amplitude when stimulated with both 10 cd.s/m2 and 3 cd.s/m2 flashes (Fig. 4b). This is replicated in the light adapted response showing that cones are also being lost.
The retinal pigment epithelium of Fam151b KO/KO mice appears healthy
The retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) is important for the survival of photoreceptor cells as it provides support and recycles components of photoreceptor specific pathways13. The early and rapid loss of photoreceptor cells seen in the Fam151bKO/KO mice may be indicative of an RPE defect, so we examined two key RPE markers. Both RPE65 and ZO-1 are typical RPE and epithelial cell markers respectively and are both present and localised as expected. RPE65 is a membrane-associated RPE specific enzyme necessary for the generation of 11-cis-retinol in the retinoid cycle. Antibody staining on sections of 2 month old retinal tissue showed clear expression and localisation to the RPE layer in mutant mice (Fig. 5). ZO-1 localises to the tight junctions between cells. ZO-1 antibody staining on 2 month old flattened whole RPE, from which the rest of the retina had been carefully removed, enabled us to view the localization of ZO-1 at the tight junctions in both mutant and control RPE (Fig. 5).
P15 retinal sections stained for the light sensitive rod and cone opsins, rhodopsin and M/L-opsin respectively, showed that in mutant Fam151bKO/KO opsins localised to the outer segments of photoreceptor cells (Fig. 5).
Photoreceptor loss is not due to light toxicity
Mice open their eyes at about P14, just before we observed increased GFAP expression and reduced retinal function, raising the possibility that photoreceptor function may be lost due to light toxicity. To test this we removed pups, along with their mothers, from a 12 hour light/dark cycle and placed them in a constant dark environment for 1 week from P13, about one day prior to eye opening, until P20 and immediately thereafter analysed their ERG. We compared ERGs from Fam151bKO/KO mice kept in a dark environment with wild-type littermates kept in the same environment and with Fam151bKO/KO mice and wild-type littermates kept in a normal 12 hour light/dark cycle (Fig. 4c). The mutant mice maintained in the dark exhibited similar photoreceptor responses to both standard and high intensity flashes, compared with Fam151bKO/KO kept in a normal light cycle. The ERG responses of wild-type mice kept in the dark indicated that the absence of light over this period of development did not affect their photoreceptor function.
Fam151b KO/KO mice do not show disrupted nerve patterning
Given the role of the homologue of Fam151b, Menorin, in C. elegans we looked at the patterning of nerves in embryonic skin by neurofilament staining. Developing nerves within the skin were visualised and their branch angles measured. No significant difference was found between Fam151bKO/KO mice and their wild-type littermates. (Fig. 6).
Fam151a mutant mice
We asked if mutations in the paralogous gene, Fam151a, had any detectable phenotype and in particular if they resulted in a similar mutant retinal phenotype. Previously, mice homozygous for a targeted mutation in Fam151a had been bred and phenotyped as part of the IMPC effort and no eye defect was reported at 15 weeks of age. To confirm this, using CRISPR, we generated several mice carrying Fam151a mutations. We selected one, which had a complex double deletion of 19 and 6 bp, flanking a 16 bp section in exon 1, predicted to cause a premature stop codon in exon 2 (Fig. 7a) which showed a loss of Fam151a protein in a Western performed on kidney samples (Fig. 7b), and bred homozygous mutant mice which were aged alongside wild-type and heterozygous littermates.
At one year, ERG analysis of the mutant mice found no decrease in retinal response to a light stimulus; both a-waves and b-waves were similar to those observed in the wild-type litter mates (Fig. 7c). Gross retinal morphology also appeared normal on fundal imaging, and histological analysis showed no loss of photoreceptor cells, or increased presence of GFAP staining (Fig. 7d–f).
During the IMPC analysis of the Fam151a mutant mice 1 of 16 homozygous mutant mice was described as having abnormal heart morphology; an enlarged heart. We measured the heart weight relative to body weight of our Fam151a mutant mice and found no significant difference between Fam151aKO/KO mutants and their wild-type and heterozygous litter mates (Fig. 7g).
Fam151a/Fam151b double mutant mice do not exhibit a worsened phenotype
We asked if the paralogous Fam151 genes compensated for each other in viability or gross phenotype in the mutant lines. To address this Fam151a and Fam151b mutant strains were bred together to produce Fam151KO/+/Fam151bKO/+ double heterozygotes which were then used in matings and offspring were observed at Mendelian ratios indicating that the mice were viable. We also observe the expected number of each genotype at weaning (Chi-squared (8 degrees of freedom) p = 0.3712) (Table 1). We examined the gross retinal morphology of the retinas through fundal imaging at 3 weeks. Double homozygous mutants showed the same degree of retinal degeneration when compared to Fam151a+/+ Fam151bKO/KO littermates, which we confirmed with histology, showing no increase in the loss of photoreceptor cells in the double homozygous mice (Fig. 8). Mice were also maintained until one year of age and no abnormal phenotype, other than retinal degeneration, was observed.
Discussion
Loss of photoreceptors is a leading cause of blindness, understanding the genetic causes and pathology of the cell death is essential for developing therapeutics and possibly for developing ways of preventing the disease. Mouse models are an excellent resource in this area of research as they often recapitulate the human disease and therefore can be used to test the effectiveness of treatments and preventative strategies.
Here we show that the Fam151b gene is essential for photoreceptor survival in the mouse. Retinal function also appears to be compromised with a reduced scotopic ERG response on eye opening in mice deficient for Fam151b. With such an early phenotype a diminished production or localisation of light sensitive proteins might be expected. However, rhodopsin and M-opsin staining in photoreceptors is still present and localised to the outer segments. These proteins are still observed at later stages, at week 11 two layers of photoreceptors remain with correct localisation of opsins, indicating that after the initial surge of cell death the surviving cells retain some aspects of normal cellular architecture. To date no patients with mutations in either FAM151 paralogues have been described. Clear loss of function mutation in FAM151B are on the whole rare, and show a pattern similar to other retinal disease-causing genes. Light is well known to cause or further exacerbate retinal degeneration14,15,16,17. Photoreceptors must constantly renew essential pathway components and remove toxic products. Because of this and due to the timing of the retinal degeneration, we investigated whether light caused photoreceptor loss in the Fam151bKO/KO mice and found this not to be the case. Mice kept in a dark environment from before their eyes were open showed a similar rate of degeneration. It is assumed that prior to eye opening some light may leak through the eyelids, but as no GFAP staining was observed in P11 retinas this is unlikely to be the cause of degeneration.
The molecular function of menorin/FAM151A and B is unknown. The C.elegans protein, SAX-7, interacts with menorin to control the dendritic branching of sensory neurons5. Mutants of the mammalian homologue of Sax-7, L1CAM, have been described as having abnormal axon guidance and retinal ganglion cells, as well as other neuronal problems18,19,20,21. This phenotype has similarities to that seen in C. elegans mutants, and has implicated L1CAM in the precise guidance of axons. However this differs from the phenotype we have observed in Fam151bKO/KO mice. Furthermore, the branch pattern of nerves located in the skin was analysed and no abnormality was observed in mutant mice (Fig. 6). In addition, loss of dendritic complexity in humans has been linked to behavioural defects, autism and schizophrenia22,23. Analysis of the Fam151bKO/KO mutant mice in the ImPress protocols found no abnormal behavioural phenotype.
Given the strong statistical significance of profile comparisons (HHpred), and the concordance of known and predicted secondary structures and conserved active site residues (Fig. 1), we have shown that the FAM151 proteins are members of the PLC-like phosphodiesterase superfamily of enzymes. However, the remarkable substrate diversity of its phosphodiesterase homologues, means our computational analysis is unable to predict the substrate of the FAM151 family. Ultimately, identification of substrates and products will enhance our understanding of dendritic branching in nematode and retinal maintenance in mammals.
Material and Methods
Sequence analysis
The computational protein sequence analysis began by performing a JackHMMER iterative search24 beginning from the human FAM151B protein sequence, against the UniRef50 database6. The FAM151 family is widely distributed in animals, including nematodes (C. elegans; UniProt: O45879) and hexapods (D. melanogaster; UniProt: Q9VLU9). This reproduces the family phyletic distribution reported in Pfam (Family: DUF2181/PF10223)25. Next, we took advantage of profile-versus-profile (HHpred)7 to search PDB70 database for more divergent FAM151 homologues using as input a profile generated from the multiple protein sequence alignment of FAM151 family. The PDB70 database contains profile hidden Markov models (HMMs) for representative sequences, clustered to 70% maximum pairwise sequence identity to reduce redundancy, drawn from the PDB (Protein Data Bank)26.
Mice
Mice were generated at MRC Harwell from ES cells with a targeted “knock-out first”, tm1a, mutation in Fam151b, and subsequently crossed with CRE recombinase expressing mice to generate mice with a LacZ insertion in intron 2 and a deletion of exon 3 (the allele is Fam151btm1b(EUCOMM)Hmgu, hereafter Fam151bKO). The ES cells are of C57BL/6N origin, and the resulting mice initially maintained by crossing with C57BL/6NTac mice, and offspring selected for absence of Cre recombinase. The mutants were subsequently crossed with and maintained on a C57BL/6J background, and genotyped to ensure removal of the Crb1 mutation originating from the C57BL/6N strain.
Fam151aKO/KO mice were made by microinjection of CRISPR gRNA targeting exon 1 and Cas9 protein into the pronucleus of fertilized eggs (Table 2). Sequencing identified a mouse with a 19 and 6 bp deletion surrounding a 16 bp section in exon 1. gRNAs were chosen based on low off-target predictions and founder mice were bred with C57BL/6J mice first before breeding on.
All animal work was approved by the University of Edinburgh internal ethics committee and was performed in accordance with the institutional guidelines under license by the UK Home Office.
Immunohistochemistry
Mice were culled and eyes were enucleated and placed into Davidson’s fixative (28.5% ethanol, 2.2% neutral buffered formalin, 11% glacial acetic acid) for 1 hour (cryosectioning) or overnight (wax embedding). For cryosectioning eyes were removed from Davidson’s fixative and placed into 10%, 15% and 20% sucrose in PBS for 15 mins, 15 mins and overnight respectively. Eyes were then embedded using OCT cryopreservant and kept at −80 until sectioned. For wax preservation eyes were removed from Davidson’s fix and placed successively into 70% ethanol, twice in 70% 80% xylene, then 90% paraffin and finally twice in 100%; paraffin each for 45 mins.
Heamatoxylin and Eosin staining was performed on 8 µm paraffin tissue sections and imaged on a Zeiss Brightfield microscope.
Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein (GFAP) antibody (ab7260, Abcam), RPE65 (ab13826, Abcam), Rhodopsin (MAB5356, Millipore), M/L-Opsin (AB5405, Millipore) were used on 8um frozen sections at 1:100 in blocking buffer (TBS with 0.1% triton x-100 and 4% donkey serum) and imaged on a Nikon A1R microscope.
For wholemount staining of RPE eyes were enucleated and immersed in 2% PFA for 3 minutes, and washed twice in PBS for 5 minutes. The rest of the retina was dissected from the RPE by removing the cornea and lens and carefully peeling the retinal tissue off to leave only the RPE attached to scleral tissue. Radial incisions were made in order to lay the RPE flat and methanol was added slowly and the tissue was placed at −20 °C for four hours. Staining was then performed on the RPE using the ZO-1 antibody (33–9100, Thermo Scientific) 1:100 in blocking buffer. All staining was performed on an n of 3 for each genotype.
For wholemount staining on embryonic skin at embryonic day 16.5 mice were collected and culled by schedule 1 approved methods. Limbs were removed and the body was placed in 4% PFA at 4 °C overnight. The bodies were then washed three times in PBS for five minutes at room temperature and transferred to 100% Methanol at −20 °C for 4 hours. The skin was then removed and rehydrated in Methanol/PBS-T (PBS with 0.2% triton X-100) mixtures of 75%, 50% and 25% for five minutes each. The skin was then stained with Neurofilament (2H3, DSHB) antibody 1:400 in blocking buffer.
Electroretinography
All mice undergoing an ERG were dark adapted overnight prior to the procedure, and experiments were carried out in a darkened room under red light using an HMsERG system (Ocuscience). Mice were anesthetised using isofluorane and pupils were dilated through the topical application of 1% w/v tropicamide before being placed on a heated ERG plate. Three grounding electrodes were used subcutaneously (tail, and each cheek) and silver embedded electrodes were placed upon the cornea held in place with a contact lens. The standard International Society for Clinical Electrophysiology of Vision (ISCEV) protocol was used which recorded scotopic responses before a 10 min light adaption phase in order to record photopic responses27. 3 and 10 cd.s/m2 light intensity scotopic responses were used for analysis. Data was analysed using Graphpad Prism and compared by unpaired t-test with Welch’s correction.
Western blot
Protein samples were ran on a 4–12% Tris-Bis gel (Invitrogen) and transferred to a PVDF membrane. Anti-α-tubulin (ab4074, Abcam) and anti-Fam151a (NBP2-13983, Novus Biologicals) were all diluted 1:1000 in TBS with 0.1% tween-20 and 5% Marvel and incubated overnight at 4 °C. Horseradish-peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit (NA934V, GE Healthcare Life Sciences) antibody was diluted 1:7000 in PBS with 0.1% tween-20 and 5% Marvel and incubated at room temperature for 1 h.
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Acknowledgements
The generation and initial phenotyping of the mice was part of the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium, funded by MRC grant A410 and NIH grant 5UM1HG006348-08. This work was funded by the Medical Research Council via core funding to the Human Genetics Unit.
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A.S.F., I.J.J. and S.W. planned the work; A.S.F., L.M., M.K., S.C.-M. and S.H.C. generated the data: A.S.F., L.S.-P., S.W., S.H.C. and I.J.J. analysed data; S.H.C., S.W. and I.J.J. supervised the work; A.S.F. and I. J.J. wrote the manuscript and A.S.F. produced the figures.
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Findlay, A.S., McKie, L., Keighren, M. et al. Fam151b, the mouse homologue of C.elegans menorin gene, is essential for retinal function. Sci Rep 10, 437 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-57398-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-57398-4
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