PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Elevated retinal cGMP is not associated with elevated circulating cGMP levels in a canine model of retinitis pigmentosa.

  • Laurence M Occelli,
  • Kelian Sun,
  • Paige A Winkler,
  • Brandy J Morgan,
  • Simon M Petersen-Jones

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0279437
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 12
p. e0279437

Abstract

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PurposeTo investigate whether raised levels of retinal cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) was reflected in plasma levels in PDE6A-/- dogs.Materials and methodsRetina was collected from 2-month-old wildtype dogs (PDE6A+/+, N = 6), heterozygous dogs (PDE6A+/-, N = 4) and affected dogs (PDE6A-/-, N = 3) and plasma was collected from 2-month-old wildtype dogs (PDE6A+/+, N = 5), heterozygous dogs (PDE6A+/-, N = 5) and affected dogs (PDE6A-/-, N = 5). Retina and plasma samples were measured by ELISA.ResultscGMP levels in retinal samples of PDE6A-/- dogs at 2 months of age were significantly elevated. There was no significant difference in plasma cGMP levels between wildtype and PDE6A-/- or PDE6A+/- puppies. However, the plasma cGMP levels of the PDE6A-/- puppies were significantly lower than that of PDE6A+/- puppies.ConclusioncGMP levels in the plasma from PDE6A-/- was not elevated when compared to control dogs. At the 2-month timepoint, cGMP plasma levels would not be a useful biomarker for disease.