Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Veterinary Medicine

Selected Works

Retinitis pigmentosa

1997

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Canine Rod Photoreceptor Cgmp-Gated Channel Protein Α-Subunit: Studies On The Expression Of The Gene And Characterization Of The Cdna, Qi Zhang, Sue Pearce-Kelling, Gregory Acland, Gustavo Aguirre, Kunal Ray Jul 1997

Canine Rod Photoreceptor Cgmp-Gated Channel Protein Α-Subunit: Studies On The Expression Of The Gene And Characterization Of The Cdna, Qi Zhang, Sue Pearce-Kelling, Gregory Acland, Gustavo Aguirre, Kunal Ray

Gustavo D. Aguirre, VMD, PhD

Rod photoreceptor cyclic GMP gated-channel protein is a key component of the visual transduction cascade in the vertebrate retina. The protein is composed of at least two subunits (α and β). Mutations in the α-subunit (CNGC1) have been shown to cause retinitis pigmentosa (RP) in humans. Several heterogeneous canine retinal diseases, which are clinically similar to RP, are known collectively as progressive retinal atrophy (PRA) and occur in dogs in a breed-specific manner. For the purpose of examining CNGC1 gene as a candidate for PRA, we report here the characterization of canine CNGC1 cDNA, and examine the expression of the …


Differential Expression Of Photoreceptor-Specific Proteins During Disease And Degeneration In The Progressive Rod-Cone Degeneration (Prcd) Retina, Kathryn Gropp, Jun Huang, Gustavo Aguirre May 1997

Differential Expression Of Photoreceptor-Specific Proteins During Disease And Degeneration In The Progressive Rod-Cone Degeneration (Prcd) Retina, Kathryn Gropp, Jun Huang, Gustavo Aguirre

Gustavo D. Aguirre, VMD, PhD

Progressive rod-cone degeneration (prcd) is a late-onset hereditary retinal degeneration characterized by normal development of photoreceptors prior to degeneration and death of visual cells. We reported previously that expression of opsin mRNA and protein decreases prior to visual cell degeneration. To examine the specificity of this reduction, we have used immunocytochemistry to correlate photoreceptor-specific protein expression with visual cell disease progression. Eyes from light-adapted age-matched control andprcd-affected dogs were fixed in paraformaldehyde, embedded in diethylene glycol distearate (DGD) wax, and reacted with antibodies specific to interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP), S-antigen, opsin, phosducin, γ-phosphodiesterase (γ-PDE), and β1-transducin. While IRBP expression did …