Peer review process
Revised: This Reviewed Preprint has been revised by the authors in response to the previous round of peer review; the eLife assessment and the public reviews have been updated where necessary by the editors and peer reviewers.
Read more about eLife’s peer review process.Editors
- Reviewing EditorKevin EadeLowy Medical Research Institute, La Jolla, United States of America
- Senior EditorLois SmithBoston Children's Hospital, Boston, United States of America
Reviewer #2 (Public Review):
Summary:
The manuscript by Kandoi et al. describes a new 3D retinal organoid model of a mono-allelic copy number variant of the rhodopsin gene that in a patient led to autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa. The evidence provided here is relatively strong that the rod photoreceptor phenotype observed in an adult patient with RP in vivo is similar to that phenotype observed in human stem cell-derived retinal organoids. Increases in RHO expression were detected by qPCR, RNA-seq, and IHC support this phenotype. Importantly, the amelioration of photoreceptor rhodopsin mislocalization and related defects using the small molecule drug photoregulin demonstrates an important potential clinical application.
Strengths:
- Retinal organoids derived from patient with adRP.
- RHO mislocalization could explain the phenotype in patients.
Weaknesses:
- Organoids at 300 days do not show PR loss.
Additional minor weaknesses
- Bulk RNAseq methods require greater detail, particularly with respect to how total or mRNA was purified, how was it quantified for concentration and integrity (i.e. Nanodrop, Tape station, Bioanalyzer), what reagents were used for library preparation and how many reads were analyzed per sample.
- Fig. 4. The levels of RHO visualized in tissue sections (panels A-C) does not seem to match the general levels shown for the western blots (panel D) which appear to be far higher in RM western blot samples than in the IHC images. Please clarify why there is such a difference.
- Line 186: by what criteria are the authors able to state that " there were no clear visible anatomical changes in apical-basal retinal cell type distribution (data not shown)". Was this based on histological staining with antibodies, nuclear counter-staining or some other evaluation?
Reviewer #3 (Public Review):
This manuscript reports a novel pedigree with four intact copies of RHO on a single chromosome which appears to lead to overexpression of rhodopsin and a corresponding autosomal dominant form of RP. The authors generate retinal organoids from patient- and control-derived cells, characterize the phenotypes of the organoids, and then attempt to 'treat' aberrant rhodopsin expression/mislocalization in the patient organoids using a small molecule called photoregulin 3 (PR3). While this novel genetic mechanism for adRP is interesting, the organoid work is not compelling. There are multiple problems related to the technical approaches, the presentation of the results, and the interpretations of the data. I will present my concerns roughly in the order in which they appear in the manuscript and will separate them into 'major' and 'minor' categories:
Major concerns:
(1) Individual human retinal organoids in culture can show a wide range of differentiation phenotypes with respect to the expression of specific markers, percentages of given cell types, etc. For this reason, it can be very difficult to make rigorous, quantitative comparisons between 'wild-type' and 'mutant' organoids. Despite this difficulty, the author of the present manuscript frequently present results in an impressionistic manner without quantitation. Furthermore, there is no indication that the investigator who performed the phenotypic analyses was blind with respect to the genotype. In my opinion, such blinding is essential for the analysis of phenotypes in retinal organoids.
To give an example, in lines 193-194 the authors write "we observed that while the patient organoids developing connecting cilium and the inner segments similar to control organoids, they failed to extend outer segments". Outer segments almost never form normally in human retinal organoids, even when derived from 'wild-type' cells. Thus, I consider it wholly inadequate to simply state that outer segment formation 'failed' without a rigorous, quantitative, and blinded comparison of patient and control organoids.
(2) The presentation of qPCR results in Fig. 3A in very confusing. First, the authors normalize expression to that of CRX, but they don't really explain why. In lines 210-211 they write "CRX, a ubiquitously expressing photoreceptor gene maintained from development to adulthood." Several parts of this sentence are misleading or incomplete. First, CRX is not 'ubiquitously expressed' (which usually means 'in all cell types') nor is it photoreceptor-specific: CRX is expressed in rods, cones, and bipolar cells. Furthermore, CRX expression levels are not constant in photoreceptors throughout development/adulthood. So, for these reasons alone, CRX is a poor choice for normalization of photoreceptor gene expression.
Second, the authors' interpretation of the qPCR results (lines 216-218) is very confusing. The authors appear to be saying that there is a statistically significant increase in RHO levels between D120 and D300. However, the same change is observed in both control and patient organoids and is not unexpected, since the organoids are more mature at D300. The key comparison is between control and patient organoids at D300. At this time point, there appears to be no difference control and patient. The authors don't even point this out in the main text.
Third, the variability in number of photoreceptor cells in individual organoids makes a whole-organoid comparison by qPCR fraught with difficulty. It seems to me that what is needed here is a comparison of RHO transcript levels in isolated rod photoreceptors.
(3) I cannot understand what the authors are comparing in the bulk RNA-seq analysis presented in the paragraph starting with line 222 and in the paragraph starting with line 306. They write "we performed bulk-RNA sequencing on 300-days-old retinal organoids (n=3 independent biological replicates). Patient retinal organoids demonstrated upregulated transcriptomic levels of RHO... comparable to the qRT-PCR data." From the wording, it suggests that they are comparing bulk RNA-seq of patient and control organoids at D300. However, this is not stated anywhere in the main text, the figure legend, or the Methods. Yet, the subsequent line "comparable to the qRT-PCR data" makes no sense, because the qPCR comparison was between patient samples at two different time points, D120 and D300, not between patient and control. Thus, the reader is left with no clear idea of what is even being compared by RNA-seq analysis.
Remarkably, the exact same lack of clarity as to what is being compared plagues the second RNA-seq analysis presented in the paragraph starting with line 306. Here the authors write "We further carried out bulk RNA-sequencing analysis to comprehensively characterize three different groups of organoids, 0.25 μM PR3-treated and vehicle-treated patient organoids and control (RC) organoids from three independent differentiation experiments. Consistent with the qRT-PCR gene expression analysis, the results showed a significant downregulation in RHO and other rod phototransduction genes." Here, the authors make it clear that they have performed RNA-seq on three types of sample: PR3-treated patient organoids, vehicle-treated patient organoids, and control organoids (presumably not treated). Yet, in the next sentence they state "the results showed a significant downregulation in RHO", but they don't state what two of the three conditions are being compared! Although I can assume that the comparison presented in Fig. 6A is between patient vehicle-treated and PR3-treated organoids, this is nowhere explicitly stated in the manuscript.
(4) There are multiple flaws in the analysis and interpretation of the PR3 treatment results. The authors wrote (lines 289-2945) "We treated long-term cultured 300-days-old, RHO-CNV patient retinal organoids with varying concentrations of PR3 (0.1, 0.25 and 0.5 μM) for one week and assessed the effects on RHO mRNA expression and protein localization. Immunofluorescence staining of PR3-treated organoids displayed a partial rescue of RHO localization with optimal trafficking observed in the 0.25 μM PR3-treated organoids (Figure 5B). None of the organoids showed any evidence of toxicity post-treatment."
There are multiple problems. First, the results are impressionistic and not quantitative. Second, it's not clear that the investigator was blinded with respect to treatment condition. Third, in the sections presented, the organoids look much more disorganized in the PR3-treated conditions than in the control. In particular, the ONL looks much more poorly formed. Overall, I'd say the organoids looked considerably worse in the 0.25 and 0.5 microM conditions than in the control, but I don't know whether or not the images are representative. Without rigorously quantitative and blinded analysis, it is impossible to draw solid conclusions here. Lastly, the authors state that "none of the organoids showed any evidence of toxicity post-treatment," but do not explain what criteria were used to determine that there was no toxicity.
(5) qPCR-based quantitation of rod gene expression changes in response to PR3 treatment is not well-designed. In lines 294-297 the authors wrote "PR3 drove a significant downregulation of RHO in a dose-dependent manner. Following qRT-PCR analysis, we observed a 2-to-5 log2FC decrease in RHO expression, along with smaller decreases in other rod-specific genes including NR2E3, GNAT1 and PDE6B." I assume these analyses were performed on cDNA derived from whole organoids. There are two problems with this analysis/interpretation. First, a decrease in rod gene expression can be caused by a decrease in the number of rods in the treated organoids (e.g., by cell death) or by a decrease in the expression of rod genes within individual rods. The authors do not distinguish between these two possibilities. Second, as stated above, the percentage of cells that are rods in a given organoid can vary from organoid to organoid. So, to determine whether there is downregulation of rod gene expression, one should ideally perform the qPCR analysis on purified rods.
(6) In Fig. 4B 'RM' panels, the authors show RHO staining around the somata of 'rods' but the inset images suggest that several of these cells lack both NRL and OTX2 staining in their nuclei. All rods should be positive for NRL. Conversely, the same image shows a layer of cells sclerad to the cells with putative RHO somal staining which do not show somal staining, and yet they do appear to be positive for NRL and OTX2. What is going on here? The authors need to provide interpretations for these findings.
Minor concerns:
(1) The writing is poor in many places. Problems include: poor word choice (e.g., 'semi-occasional' is used three times where 'occasional' or 'infrequent' would be better); superfluous use of the definite article in many places (e.g., lines 189-190 "by the light microscopy" should be "by light microscopy"); awkward sentence structures (e.g., lines 208-209: "To equilibrate the data to equivalent the number of photoreceptors in organoids"), opaque expressions (e.g., line 217 "there was a significant ~3 log2 fold change (log2FC)"; why not just say "an ~8-fold change"?); poor proof-reading (Abstract says that 40% of adRP cases are due to mutation in RHO, then the Introduction says the figure is 25%) etc.
(2) The figures are not numbered, which makes it painful for the reviewer to correlate main text call-outs, figure legends, and actual figures. I had to repeatedly count down the list of figures to determine which figure I should be looking at.
(3) In the abstract, the authors suggest that the patient's disease "develops from a dominant negative gain of function" mechanism. I don't agree with this interpretation. Typically 'dominant-negative' refers to an aberrant protein which directly interferes with the function of the normal protein, for example by forming non-functional heterodimers. In the present patient, the disease can be explained by a simple overexpression mechanism, as it has been previously demonstrated in mice that even minimal overexpression of rhodopsin (e.g., ~25% more than normal levels) can led to progressive rod degeneration: PMID: 11222515.
(4) In line 85 the word 'Morphologically' is superfluous and can be deleted.
(5) In the Introduction the authors should more clearly articulate the rationale for using PR3 to treat this patient: because it leads to downregulation of multiple rod genes including RHO. This isn't clearly explained until the Discussion.
(6) The authors mention in several places that PR3 may act via inhibition of NR2E3. Although this was the conclusion of the original publication, the evidence that PR3 acts via Nr2e3 in mice is not solid. The original study (PMID: 29148976) showed that the main effect of PR3 application on mouse retinas is downregulation of numerous rod genes. However, knockout of Nr2e3 in mouse has been shown to have very little effect on rod gene expression, and Nr2e3 mutant rods have largely preserved rod function as demonstrated by scotopic ERGs PMIDs: 15634773, 16110338, 15689355). The primary gene expression defect in Nr2e3 mutant mouse rods is upregulation of a subset of cone genes, a change not observed upon application of PR3 to mouse retinas. For these reasons, I am skeptical that PR3 acts via inhibition of Nr2e3 activity, and I would suggest that the present authors qualify that interpretation.
(7) This mechanistic speculation presented in lines 274-278 is not warranted. Ectopic localization of opsin to the cytoplasmic membrane occurs in a wide range of genetic forms of rod degeneration.