Sofiia Olander, Sinem Karaman, Fumi Suomi, Kevin Aguilar, Aleksandra Zhaivoron, Maiken Nedergaard, Lina Smeds, Jussi Tiihonen, Albert Quintana, Juan Hidalgo, Kari Alitalo, Petri Ala-Laurila, Gulayse Ince-Dunn, Anu Suomalainen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Retinopathy is a common symptom in mitochondrial diseases, and a leading cause of blindness in working-age individuals, often arising as a consequence of diabetes. Here, we demonstrate that postnatal loss of the replicative helicase of mitochondrial DNA in the astrocytes and Müller glia induces neovascular retinopathy. In these retinas, the macroglia show pathological reactivation, leading to hallmark features of neovascularization with blood-retina-barrier leakage, secondary microgliosis, and complement cascade activation. Similar reactivation of astrocytes in the cerebral cortex does not compromise vascular integrity, indicating tissue-specific roles of mitochondrial metabolism in macroglia for vascular homeostasis. Three secreted angiogenic factors-Fgf2, Pgf, and Lcn2-known to contribute to diabetic retinopathy, were induced. Spike recordings of the most sensitive retinal ganglion cells revealed normal rod function and intact retinal coding. These findings highlight the critical role of glial mitochondrial metabolism in neovascular retinopathy, with important implications for therapy development for mitochondrial and common forms of vision loss.
期刊介绍:
EMBO Molecular Medicine is an open access journal in the field of experimental medicine, dedicated to science at the interface between clinical research and basic life sciences. In addition to human data, we welcome original studies performed in cells and/or animals provided they demonstrate human disease relevance.
To enhance and better specify our commitment to precision medicine, we have expanded the scope of EMM and call for contributions in the following fields:
Environmental health and medicine, in particular studies in the field of environmental medicine in its functional and mechanistic aspects (exposome studies, toxicology, biomarkers, modeling, and intervention).
Clinical studies and case reports - Human clinical studies providing decisive clues how to control a given disease (epidemiological, pathophysiological, therapeutic, and vaccine studies). Case reports supporting hypothesis-driven research on the disease.
Biomedical technologies - Studies that present innovative materials, tools, devices, and technologies with direct translational potential and applicability (imaging technologies, drug delivery systems, tissue engineering, and AI)