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Fatty acid transport protein 1 regulates retinoid metabolism and photoreceptor development in mouse retina
Author(s) -
Aurélie Cubizolle,
Laurent Guy,
Bertrand Mollereau,
Christian Hamel,
Philippe Brabet
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0180148
Subject(s) - visual phototransduction , biology , retinal pigment epithelium , rpe65 , retina , retinal degeneration , cis trans isomerases , fatty acid , retinal , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , retinoid , rhodopsin , lipid droplet , retinoic acid , peptidylprolyl isomerase , isomerase , neuroscience , gene
In retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), RPE65 catalyzes the isomerization of all- trans -retinyl fatty acid esters to 11- cis -retinol in the visual cycle and controls the rhodopsin regeneration rate. However, the mechanisms by which these processes are regulated are still unclear. Fatty Acid Transport Protein 1 (FATP1) is involved in fatty acid uptake and lipid metabolism in a variety of cell types. FATP1 co-localizes with RPE65 in RPE and inhibits its isomerase activity in vitro . Here, we further investigated the role of FATP1 in the visual cycle using transgenic mice that overexpress human FATP1 specifically in the RPE (hFATP1TG mice). The mice displayed no delay in the kinetics of regeneration of the visual chromophore 11- cis -retinal after photobleaching and had no defects in light sensitivity. However, the total retinoid content was higher in the hFATP1TG mice than in wild type mice, and the transgenic mice also displayed an age-related accumulation (up to 40%) of all- trans -retinal and retinyl esters that was not observed in control mice. Consistent with these results, hFATP1TG mice were more susceptible to light-induced photoreceptor degeneration. hFATP1 overexpression also induced an ~3.5-fold increase in retinosome autofluorescence, as measured by two-photon microscopy. Interestingly, hFATP1TG retina contained ~25% more photoreceptor cells and ~35% longer outer segments than wild type mice, revealing a non-cell-autonomous effect of hFATP1 expressed in the RPE. These data are the first to show that FATP1-mediated fatty acid uptake in the RPE controls both retinoid metabolism in the outer retina and photoreceptor development.

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