Neurobiology of Disease (Jun 2010)

Neuroprotective effect of overexpression of thioredoxin on photoreceptor degeneration in Tubby mice

  • Li Kong,
  • Xiaohong Zhou,
  • Feng Li,
  • Juni Yodoi,
  • James McGinnis,
  • Wei Cao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38, no. 3
pp. 446 – 455

Abstract

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The Tubby mouse is a phenotypic model for sensorineural deafness and retinal dystrophy including Usher syndrome type 1. Thioredoxin is a small 13 kDa protein which, when ubiquitously expressed as a transgene in the mouse, provides protection against multiple disease states including light-induced and oxidative stress-induced neurodegeneration and is down-regulated in the Tubby retina. We tested if overexpression of human thioredoxin in the Tubby mouse inhibits retinal degeneration and loss of visual function. Electroretinography, immunocytochemistry, quantitative histology, RT-PCR and Western blots were used to obtain data which showed that thioredoxin overexpression prevented loss of photoreceptors and retinal function. Analysis of signal pathways showed that thioredoxin up-regulated neurotrophic factors BDNF and GDNF and activated survival signaling pathways Akt, Ras/Raf1/ and the ERKs while inhibiting the ASK1/JNK apoptosis pathway. Relationships between the Tubby gene, its pathological phenotype and regulation of the thioredoxin system remain to be established.

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