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Full-Text Articles in Medical Biotechnology

Modeling The Structural Consequences Of Best1 Missense Mutations, Karina E. Guziewicz, Gustavo D. Aguirre, Barbara Zangerl Feb 2016

Modeling The Structural Consequences Of Best1 Missense Mutations, Karina E. Guziewicz, Gustavo D. Aguirre, Barbara Zangerl

Gustavo D. Aguirre, VMD, PhD

Mutations in the bestrophin-1 gene (BEST1) are an important cause of inherited retinal disorders. Hitherto, over 100 unique allelic variants have been linked to the human BEST1 (hBEST1), and associated with disease phenotypes, broadly termed as bestrophinopathies. A spontaneous animal model recapitulating BEST1-related phenotypes, canine multifocal retinopathy (cmr), is caused by mutations in the canine gene ortholog (cBEST1). We have recently characterized molecular consequences of cmr, demonstrating defective protein trafficking as a result of G161D (cmr2) mutation. To further investigate the pathological effects of BEST1 missense mutations, canine and human peptide fragments derived from the protein sequence have been studied …


Rpgrip1 And Cone-Rod Dystrophy In Dogs, Tatyana N. Kuznetsova, Barbara Zangerl, Gustavo D. Aguirre Feb 2016

Rpgrip1 And Cone-Rod Dystrophy In Dogs, Tatyana N. Kuznetsova, Barbara Zangerl, Gustavo D. Aguirre

Gustavo D. Aguirre, VMD, PhD

Cone–rod dystrophies (crd) represent a group of progressive inherited blinding diseases characterized by primary dysfunction and loss of cone photoreceptors accompanying or preceding rod death. Recessive crd type 1 was described in dogs associated with an RPGRIP1 exon 2 mutation, but with lack of complete concordance between genotype and phenotype. This review highlights role of the RPGRIP1, a component of complex protein networks, and its function in the primary cilium, and discusses the potential mechanisms of genotype–phenotype discordance observed in dogs with the RPGRIP1 mutation.