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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Primary Cilium-Mediated Retinal Pigment Epithelium Maturation Is Disrupted in Ciliopathy Patient Cells

Vladimir KhristovRuchi SharmaBalendu Shekhar JhaChristine Insinna-kettenhofenSarita Rani PatnaikJustin ChangBrian P. BrooksSheldon S. MillerKapil BhartiArvydas MaminishkisHelen May-simeraMeral Gunay-aygunJason S. SilverMay Christine V. MalicdanRajarshi PalChristopher J. WestlakeKiyoharu J. MiyagishimaMostafa Reza LotfiRupa SridharanQuanlong LuPoulomi BanerjeeNathan HotalingJuliet HartfordQin WanDishita PatelRoba Dejene

subject

0301 basic medicineRetinal degenerationInduced Pluripotent Stem CellsRespiratory MucosaRetinal Pigment EpitheliumBiologyCell MaturationCiliopathiesArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyMice03 medical and health sciencesCiliogenesismedicineAnimalsCiliaInduced pluripotent stem celllcsh:QH301-705.5Mice KnockoutRetinal pigment epitheliumCiliumRetinal Degenerationmedicine.diseaseCiliopathieseye diseasesCell biologyProtein Kinase C-deltaCiliopathy030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structurelcsh:Biology (General)sense organs

description

SUMMARY Primary cilia are sensory organelles that protrude from the cell membrane. Defects in the primary cilium cause ciliopathy disorders, with retinal degeneration as a prominent phenotype. Here, we demonstrate that the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), essential for photoreceptor development and function, requires a functional primary cilium for complete maturation and that RPE maturation defects in ciliopathies precede photoreceptor degeneration. Pharmacologically enhanced ciliogenesis in wild-type induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC)-RPE leads to fully mature and functional cells. In contrast, ciliopathy patient-derived iPSC-RPE and iPSC-RPE with a knockdown of ciliary-trafficking protein remain immature, with defective apical processes, reduced functionality, and reduced adult-specific gene expression. Proteins of the primary cilium regulate RPE maturation by simultaneously suppressing canonical WNT and activating PKCδ pathways. A similar cilium-dependent maturation pathway exists in lung epithelium. Our results provide insights into ciliopathy-induced retinal degeneration, demonstrate a developmental role for primary cilia in epithelial maturation, and provide a method to mature iPSC epithelial cells for clinical applications.

10.1016/j.celrep.2017.12.038http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211124717318478