A metabotropic glutamate receptor agonist enhances visual signal fidelity in a mouse model of retinitis pigmentosa

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Abstract

Many inherited retinal diseases target photoreceptors, which transduce light into a neural signal that is processed by the downstream visual system. As photoreceptors degenerate, physiological and morphological changes to retinal synapses and circuitry reduce sensitivity and increase noise, degrading visual signal fidelity. Here, we pharmacologically targeted the first synapse in the retina in an effort to reduce circuit noise without sacrificing visual sensitivity. We tested a strategy to partially replace the neurotransmitter lost when photoreceptors die with an agonist of receptors that ON bipolars cells use to detect glutamate released from photoreceptors. In rd10 mice, which express a photoreceptor mutation that causes retinitis pigmentosa (RP), we found that a low dose of the mGluR6 agonist L-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid (L-AP4) reduced pathological noise induced by photoreceptor degeneration. After making in vivo electroretinogram recordings in rd10 mice to characterize the developmental time course of visual signal degeneration, we examined effects of L-AP4 on sensitivity and circuit noise by recording in vitro light-evoked responses from individual retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). L-AP4 decreased circuit noise evident in RGC recordings without significantly reducing response amplitudes, an effect that persisted over the entire time course of rod photoreceptor degeneration. Subsequent in vitro recordings from rod bipolar cells (RBCs) showed that RBCs are more depolarized in rd10 retinas, likely contributing to downstream circuit noise and reduced synaptic gain, both of which appear to be ameliorated by hyperpolarizing RBCs with L-AP4. These beneficial effects may reduce pathological circuit remodeling and preserve the efficacy of therapies designed to restore vision.

Significance Statement

Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) is an inherited degenerative disease that affects more than two million people worldwide. RP patients first lose peripheral and low-light vision due to the progressive death of their highly sensitive rod photoreceptors. Photoreceptor degeneration induces pathological noise within the retinal circuit, leading to dramatic structural changes that may hamper therapies to restore visual sensitivity. We discovered a pharmacological treatment that reduces pathological activity in a mouse model of RP without diminishing signaling in surviving circuitry. Partially replacing the neurotransmitter lost when photoreceptors die reduced noise in the retinal circuit without eliminating light sensitivity. This approach could limit the impact of the disease on retinal neurons and preserve the efficacy of subsequent restorative therapies.

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