Impaired glutamylation of RPGRORF15 underlies the cone-dominated phenotype associated with truncating distal ORF15 variants

  • Jasmina Cehajic-Kapetanovic (Shared first author)
  • Cristina Martinez-Fernandez de la Camara (Shared first author)
  • Johannes Birtel
  • Salwah Rehman
  • Michelle E McClements
  • Peter Charbel Issa
  • Andrew J Lotery
  • Robert E MacLaren

Abstract

Pathogenic variants in the Retinitis pigmentosa GTPase regulator (RPGR) gene lead to a clinically severe form of X-linked retinal dystrophy. However, it remains unclear why some variants cause a predominant rod, while others result in a cone-dominated phenotype. Post-translational glutamylation of the photoreceptor-specific RPGRORF15 isoform by the TTLL5 enzyme is essential for its optimal function in photoreceptors, and loss of TTLL5 leads to retinal dystrophy with a cone phenotype. Here we show that RPGR retinal disease, studied in a single cohort of 116 male patients, leads to a clear progressive shift from rod- to cone-dominating phenotype as the RPGRORF15 variant location approaches the distal part of the Open Reading Frame 15 (ORF15) region. The rod photoreceptor involvement on the contrary diminishes along the RGPR sequence, and the variants associated with the cone only phenotype are located predominantly in the very distal part, including the C-terminal basic domain. Moreover, these distal truncating RPGRORF15 variants disrupt the interaction with TTLL5 and lead to a significant impairment of RPGR glutamylation. Thus, consistent with the phenotype of TTLL5 pathogenic variants, our study shows that RPGRORF15 variants, which disrupt its basic domain and the interaction with TTLL5, also impair RPGR glutamylation and lead to the cone phenotype. This has implications for ongoing gene therapy clinical trials where the application of RPGR with impaired glutamylation may be less effective in treating RGPR dystrophies and may even convert a rod-cone dystrophy into a cone dystrophy phenotype.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2208707119
ISSN0027-8424
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 06.12.2022
Externally publishedYes
PubMed 36445968