FIGURE

Figure 9.

ID
ZDB-FIG-211118-81
Publication
Schlegel et al., 2021 - Disturbed retinoid metabolism upon loss of rlbp1a impairs cone function and leads to subretinal lipid deposits and photoreceptor degeneration in the zebrafish retina
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Figure 9.

Retinoid metabolism in healthy and Cralbpa-deficient retinas. Retinoid metabolism in healthy and Cralbpa-deficient retinas.

Illustration of a healthy (leftmost) and Cralbpa-deficient (rightmost) retina with the three neural layers (nuclei in dark blue). Rod and cone photoreceptors are depicted with dark blue or turquoise outer segments, respectively. Both retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells (gray-brown) and Müller glia (yellow-brown) contact photoreceptors and are potential sources for chromophore. Between the illustrations, schematics for retinoid metabolism in healthy and Cralbpa-deficient retinas are shown with black arrows indicating the sequence of reactions or transport/diffusion (for simplicity, enzymes or transport proteins other than Cralbp are not shown). In healthy retinas, Cralbpa facilitates the generation of 11cisRAL from both atRE (via the canonical visual cycle) and 11cisRE (through light-dependent hydrolysis, yellow arrow). Therefore, lack of RPE-expressed Cralbpa leads to a reduction of 11cisRAL (gray, dotted arrows) and an accumulation of retinyl ester (bold, black arrow), which manifests as an increased number of enlarged retinosomes in RPE cells (yellow circles in schematic and illustration on the right). Both rod and cone outer segment morphology is affected and with age the outer nuclear layer is thinning and the RPE may become atrophic. The contribution of Müller glial cell-expressed Cralbpb to chromophore regeneration is smaller than expected and the enzymes involved as well as the retinoid species supplied to photoreceptors (11cisRAL/11cisROL?) remain to be further investigated.

Expression Data

Expression Detail
Antibody Labeling
Phenotype Data

Phenotype Detail
Acknowledgments
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