1. Academic Validation
  2. Nitisinone improves eye and skin pigmentation defects in a mouse model of oculocutaneous albinism

Nitisinone improves eye and skin pigmentation defects in a mouse model of oculocutaneous albinism

  • J Clin Invest. 2011 Oct;121(10):3914-23. doi: 10.1172/JCI59372.
Ighovie F Onojafe 1 David R Adams Dimitre R Simeonov Jun Zhang Chi-Chao Chan Isa M Bernardini Yuri V Sergeev Monika B Dolinska Ramakrishna P Alur Murray H Brilliant William A Gahl Brian P Brooks
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Unit on Pediatric, Developmental, and Genetic Eye Disease, National Eye Institute, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
Abstract

Mutation of the Tyrosinase gene (TYR) causes oculocutaneous albinism, type 1 (OCA1), a condition characterized by reduced skin and eye melanin pigmentation and by vision loss. The retinal pigment epithelium influences postnatal visual development. Therefore, increasing ocular pigmentation in patients with OCA1 might enhance visual function. There are 2 forms of OCA1, OCA-1A and OCA-1B. Individuals with the former lack functional Tyrosinase and therefore lack melanin, while individuals with the latter produce some melanin. We hypothesized that increasing plasma tyrosine concentrations using nitisinone, an FDA-approved inhibitor of tyrosine degradation, could stabilize Tyrosinase and improve pigmentation in individuals with OCA1. Here, we tested this hypothesis in mice homozygous for either the Tyrc-2J null allele or the Tyrc-h allele, which model OCA-1A and OCA-1B, respectively. Only nitisinone-treated Tyrc-h/c-h mice manifested increased pigmentation in their fur and irides and had more pigmented melanosomes. High levels of tyrosine improved the stability and enzymatic function of the Tyrc-h protein and also increased overall melanin levels in melanocytes from a human with OCA-1B. These results suggest that the use of nitisinone in OCA-1B patients could improve their pigmentation and potentially ameliorate vision loss.

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