Beyond Epilepsy and Autism: Disruption of GABRB3 Causes Ocular Hypopigmentation

We report here a robust phenotype in the mouse in which deletion of Gabrb3 alone causes nearly complete loss of retinal pigmentation due to atrophied melanosomes, as evidenced by electron microscopy. Using exome and RNA sequencing, we confirmed that only the Gabrb3 gene was disrupted while the Oca2 gene was intact. However, mRNA abundance of Oca2 and other genes adjacent to Gabrb3 is substantially reduced in Gabrb3 −/− mice, suggesting complex transcriptional regulation in this region. These results suggest that impairment in GABRB3 downregulates OCA2 and indirectly causes ocular hypopigmentation and visual defects in AS and PWS. Graphical abstract Teaser Hypopigmentation in Angelman syndrome is thought to stem from deletion of the pigment gene OCA2. Delahanty et al. now find that disruption of Gabrb3 alone causes profound loss of retinal pigmentation via downregulation of Oca2 transcription. This suggests unique complexities in gene regulation in the 15q11-13 imprinted region.
Source: Cell Reports - Category: Cytology Source Type: research