Inflammation of the retinal pigment epithelium drives early-onset photoreceptor degeneration in Mertk-associated retinitis pigmentosa | Science Advances
Abstract
Severe, early-onset photoreceptor (PR) degeneration associated with
MERTK
mutations is thought to result from failed phagocytosis by retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Notwithstanding, the severity and onset of PR degeneration in mouse models of
Mertk
ablation are determined by the hypomorphic expression or the loss of the
Mertk
paralog
Tyro3
. Here, we find that loss of
Mertk
and reduced expression/loss of
Tyro3
led to RPE inflammation even before eye-opening. Incipient RPE inflammation cascaded to involve microglia activation and PR degeneration with monocyte infiltration. Inhibition of RPE inflammation with the JAK1/2 inhibitor ruxolitinib mitigated PR degeneration in
Mertk
−/−
mice. Neither inflammation nor severe, early-onset PR degeneration was observed in mice with defective phagocytosis alone. Thus, inflammation drives severe, early-onset PR degeneration–associated with
Mertk
loss of function.