Megalin–deficiency causes high myopia, retinal pigment epithelium-macromelanosomes and abnormal development of the ciliary body in mice

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Megalin–deficiency causes high myopia, retinal pigment epithelium-macromelanosomes and abnormal development of the ciliary body in mice. / Storm, Tina; Heegaard, Steffen; Christensen, Erik I; Nielsen, Rikke.

In: Cell and Tissue Research, Vol. 358, No. 1, 2014, p. 99-107.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Storm, T, Heegaard, S, Christensen, EI & Nielsen, R 2014, 'Megalin–deficiency causes high myopia, retinal pigment epithelium-macromelanosomes and abnormal development of the ciliary body in mice', Cell and Tissue Research, vol. 358, no. 1, pp. 99-107. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00441-014-1919-4

APA

Storm, T., Heegaard, S., Christensen, E. I., & Nielsen, R. (2014). Megalin–deficiency causes high myopia, retinal pigment epithelium-macromelanosomes and abnormal development of the ciliary body in mice. Cell and Tissue Research, 358(1), 99-107. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00441-014-1919-4

Vancouver

Storm T, Heegaard S, Christensen EI, Nielsen R. Megalin–deficiency causes high myopia, retinal pigment epithelium-macromelanosomes and abnormal development of the ciliary body in mice. Cell and Tissue Research. 2014;358(1):99-107. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00441-014-1919-4

Author

Storm, Tina ; Heegaard, Steffen ; Christensen, Erik I ; Nielsen, Rikke. / Megalin–deficiency causes high myopia, retinal pigment epithelium-macromelanosomes and abnormal development of the ciliary body in mice. In: Cell and Tissue Research. 2014 ; Vol. 358, No. 1. pp. 99-107.

Bibtex

@article{8a3afc172a9a45b8b4a09155d6fdf619,
title = "Megalin–deficiency causes high myopia, retinal pigment epithelium-macromelanosomes and abnormal development of the ciliary body in mice",
abstract = "In man, mutations of the megalin-encoding gene causes the rare Donnai-Barrow/Facio-Oculo-Acoustico-Renal Syndrome, which is partially characterized by high-grade myopia. Previous studies of renal megalin function have established that megalin is crucial for conservation of renal filtered nutrients including vitamin A; however, the role of megalin in ocular physiology and development is presently unknown. Therefore, we investigate ocular megalin expression and the ocular phenotype of megalin-deficient mice. Topographical and subcellular localization of megalin as well as the ocular phenotype of megalin-deficient mice were examined with immunological techniques using light, confocal and electron microscopy. We identified megalin in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and non-pigmented ciliary body epithelium (NPCBE) in normal mouse eyes. Immunocytochemical investigations furthermore showed that megalin localizes to vesicular structures in the RPE and NPCBE cells. Histological investigations of ocular mouse tissue also identified a severe myopia phenotype as well as enlarged RPE melanosomes and abnormal ciliary body development in the megalin-deficient mice. In conclusion, the complex ocular phenotype observed in the megalin-deficient mice suggests that megalin-mediated developmental abnormalities may contribute to the high myopia phenotype observed in the Donnai-Barrow Syndrome patients and, thus, that megalin harbors important roles in ocular development and physiology. Finally, our data show that megalin-deficient mice may provide a valuable model for future studies of megalin in ocular physiology and pathology.",
author = "Tina Storm and Steffen Heegaard and Christensen, {Erik I} and Rikke Nielsen",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1007/s00441-014-1919-4",
language = "English",
volume = "358",
pages = "99--107",
journal = "Cell and Tissue Research",
issn = "0302-766X",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Megalin–deficiency causes high myopia, retinal pigment epithelium-macromelanosomes and abnormal development of the ciliary body in mice

AU - Storm, Tina

AU - Heegaard, Steffen

AU - Christensen, Erik I

AU - Nielsen, Rikke

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - In man, mutations of the megalin-encoding gene causes the rare Donnai-Barrow/Facio-Oculo-Acoustico-Renal Syndrome, which is partially characterized by high-grade myopia. Previous studies of renal megalin function have established that megalin is crucial for conservation of renal filtered nutrients including vitamin A; however, the role of megalin in ocular physiology and development is presently unknown. Therefore, we investigate ocular megalin expression and the ocular phenotype of megalin-deficient mice. Topographical and subcellular localization of megalin as well as the ocular phenotype of megalin-deficient mice were examined with immunological techniques using light, confocal and electron microscopy. We identified megalin in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and non-pigmented ciliary body epithelium (NPCBE) in normal mouse eyes. Immunocytochemical investigations furthermore showed that megalin localizes to vesicular structures in the RPE and NPCBE cells. Histological investigations of ocular mouse tissue also identified a severe myopia phenotype as well as enlarged RPE melanosomes and abnormal ciliary body development in the megalin-deficient mice. In conclusion, the complex ocular phenotype observed in the megalin-deficient mice suggests that megalin-mediated developmental abnormalities may contribute to the high myopia phenotype observed in the Donnai-Barrow Syndrome patients and, thus, that megalin harbors important roles in ocular development and physiology. Finally, our data show that megalin-deficient mice may provide a valuable model for future studies of megalin in ocular physiology and pathology.

AB - In man, mutations of the megalin-encoding gene causes the rare Donnai-Barrow/Facio-Oculo-Acoustico-Renal Syndrome, which is partially characterized by high-grade myopia. Previous studies of renal megalin function have established that megalin is crucial for conservation of renal filtered nutrients including vitamin A; however, the role of megalin in ocular physiology and development is presently unknown. Therefore, we investigate ocular megalin expression and the ocular phenotype of megalin-deficient mice. Topographical and subcellular localization of megalin as well as the ocular phenotype of megalin-deficient mice were examined with immunological techniques using light, confocal and electron microscopy. We identified megalin in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and non-pigmented ciliary body epithelium (NPCBE) in normal mouse eyes. Immunocytochemical investigations furthermore showed that megalin localizes to vesicular structures in the RPE and NPCBE cells. Histological investigations of ocular mouse tissue also identified a severe myopia phenotype as well as enlarged RPE melanosomes and abnormal ciliary body development in the megalin-deficient mice. In conclusion, the complex ocular phenotype observed in the megalin-deficient mice suggests that megalin-mediated developmental abnormalities may contribute to the high myopia phenotype observed in the Donnai-Barrow Syndrome patients and, thus, that megalin harbors important roles in ocular development and physiology. Finally, our data show that megalin-deficient mice may provide a valuable model for future studies of megalin in ocular physiology and pathology.

U2 - 10.1007/s00441-014-1919-4

DO - 10.1007/s00441-014-1919-4

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24980834

VL - 358

SP - 99

EP - 107

JO - Cell and Tissue Research

JF - Cell and Tissue Research

SN - 0302-766X

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 138142940