351 resultados para Retinal metabolism
Resumo:
Suppression of angiogenesis during diabetes is a recognized phenomenon but is less appreciated within the context of diabetic retinopathy. The current study has investigated regulation of retinal angiogenesis by diabetic serum and determined if advanced glycation end products (AGEs) could modulate this response, possibly via AGE-receptor interactions. A novel in vitro model of retinal angiogenesis was developed and the ability of diabetic sera to regulate this process was quantified. AGE-modified serum albumin was prepared according to a range of protocols, and these were also analyzed along with neutralization of the AGE receptors galectin-3 and RAGE. Retinal ischemia and neovascularization were also studied in a murine model of oxygen-induced proliferative retinopathy (OIR) in wild-type and galectin-3 knockout mice (gal3(-/-)) after perfusion of preformed AGEs. Serum from nondiabetic patients showed significantly more angiogenic potential than diabetic serum (P <0.0001) and within the diabetic group, poor glycemic control resulted in more AGEs but less angiogenic potential than tight control (P <0.01). AGE-modified albumin caused a dose-dependent inhibition of angiogenesis (P <0.001), and AGE receptor neutralization significantly reversed the AGE-mediated suppression of angiogenesis (P <0.01). AGE-treated wild-type mice showed a significant increase in inner retinal ischemia and a reduction in neovascularization compared with non-AGE controls (P <0.001). However, ablation of galectin-3 abolished the AGE-mediated increase in retinal ischemia and restored the neovascular response to that seen in controls. The data suggest a significant suppression of angiogenesis by the retinal microvasculature during diabetes and implicate AGEs and AGE-receptor interactions in its causation.
Resumo:
Purpose: Retinal progenitor cells (RPCs) and retinal stem cells (RSCs) from rodents and humans have been isolated and characterized in vitro. Transplantation experiments have confirmed their potential as tools for cell replacement in retinal degenerative diseases. The pig represents an ideal pre-clinical animal model to study the impact of transplantation because of the similarity of its eye to the human eye. However, little is known about porcine RPCs and RSCs. We aimed to identify and characterize in vitro RPCs and RSCs from porcine ocular tissues. Methods: Cells from different subregions of embryonic, postnatal and adult porcine eyes were grown in suspension sphere culture in serum-free medium containing basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and epidermal growth factor (EGF). Growth curves and BrdU incorporation assays were performed to establish the proliferative capacity of isolated porcine retina-derived RPCs and ciliary epithelium (CE)-derived RSCs. Self-renewal potential was investigated by subsphere formation assays. Changes in gene expression were assayed by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) at different passages in culture. Finally, differentiation was induced by addition of serum to the cultures and expression of markers for retinal cell types was detected by immunohistochemical staining with specific antibodies. Results: Dissociated cells from embryonic retina and CE at different postnatal ages generated primary nestin- and Pax6-immunoreactive neurosphere colonies in vitro in numbers that decreased with age. Embryonic and postnatal retina-derived RPCs and young CE-derived RSCs displayed self-renewal capacity, generating secondary neurosphere colonies. However, their self-renewal and proliferation capacity gradually decreased and they became more committed to differentiated states with subsequent passages. The expansion capacity of RPCs and RSCs was higher when they were maintained in monolayer culture. Porcine RPCs and RSCs could be induced to differentiate in vitro to express markers of retinal neurons and glia. Conclusions: Porcine retina and CE contain RPCs and RSCs which are undifferentiated, self-renewing and multipotent and which show characteristics similar to their human counterparts. Therefore, the pig could be a useful source of cells to further investigate the cell biology of RPCs and RSCs and it could be used as a non-primate large animal model for pre-clinical studies on stem cell-based approaches to regenerative medicine in the retina.
Resumo:
Control of ocular blood flow occurs predominantly at the level of the retinal and choroidal arterioles. The present article provides an overview of the Ca2 + handling mechanisms and plasmalemmal ion channels involved in the regulation of retinal and choroidal arteriolar smooth muscle tone. Increases in global intracellular free Ca2 + ([Ca2 +]i) involve multiple mechanisms, including agonist-dependent release of Ca2 + from intracellular stores through activation of the inositol trisphosphate (IP3) pathway. Ca2 + enters by voltage-dependent L-type Ca2 + channels and novel dihydropyridine-sensitive store-operated nonselective cation channels. Ca2 + extrusion is mediated by plasmalemmal Ca2 +-ATPases and through Na+/Ca2+ exchange. Local Ca2 + transients (Ca2 + sparks) play an important excitatory role, acting as the building blocks for more global Ca2 + signals that can initiate vasoconstriction. K+ and Cl- channels may also affect cell function by modulating membrane potential. The precise contribution of each of these mechanisms to the regulation of retinal and choroidal perfusion in vivo warrants future investigation.
Resumo:
Spontaneous Ca2+-events were imaged in myocytes within intact retinal arterioles (diameter < 40 mu m) freshly isolated from rat eyes. Ca2+-sparks were often observed to spread across the width of these small cells, and could summate to produce prolonged Ca2+-oscillations and contraction. Application of cyclopiazonic acid (20 mu M) transiently increased spark frequency and oscillation amplitude, but inhibited both sparks and oscillations within 60 s. Both ryanodine (100 mu M) and tetracaine (100 mu M) reduced the frequency of sparks and oscillations, while tetracaine also reduced oscillation amplitude. None of these interventions affected spark amplitude. Nifedipine, which blocks store filling independently of any action on L-type Ca2+-channels in these cells, reduced the frequency and amplitude of both sparks and oscillations. Removal of external [Ca2+] (1 mM EGTA) also reduced the frequency of sparks and oscillations but these reductions were slower in onset than those in the presence of tetracaine or cyclopiazonic acid. Cyclopiazonic acid, nifedipine and low external [Ca2+] all reduced SR loading, as indicated by the amplitude of caffeine evoked Ca2+-transients. This study demonstrates for the first time that spontaneous Ca2+-events in small arterioles of the eye result from activation of ryanodine receptors in the SR and suggests that this activation is not tightly coupled to Ca2+-influx. The data also supports a model in which Ca2+-sparks act as building blocks for more prolonged, global Ca2+-signals. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
Genome-scale metabolic models promise important insights into cell function. However, the definition of pathways and functional network modules within these models, and in the biochemical literature in general, is often based on intuitive reasoning. Although mathematical methods have been proposed to identify modules, which are defined as groups of reactions with correlated fluxes, there is a need for experimental verification. We show here that multivariate statistical analysis of the NMR-derived intra- and extracellular metabolite profiles of single-gene deletion mutants in specific metabolic pathways in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae identified outliers whose profiles were markedly different from those of the other mutants in their respective pathways. Application of flux coupling analysis to a metabolic model of this yeast showed that the deleted gene in an outlying mutant encoded an enzyme that was not part of the same functional network module as the other enzymes in the pathway. We suggest that metabolomic methods such as this, which do not require any knowledge of how a gene deletion might perturb the metabolic network, provide an empirical method for validating and ultimately refining the predicted network structure.