Microglia Activation and Immunomodulatory Therapies for Retinal Degenerations (original) (raw)
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The Journal of Neuroscience, 2014
Chronic retinal inflammation in the form of activated microglia and macrophages are implicated in the etiology of neurodegenerative diseases of the retina, including age-related macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, and glaucoma. However, molecular biomarkers and targeted therapies for immune cell activation in these disorders are currently lacking. To address this, we investigated the involvement and role of translocator protein (TSPO), a biomarker of microglial and astrocyte gliosis in brain degeneration, in the context of retinal inflammation. Here, we find that TSPO is acutely and specifically upregulated in retinal microglia in separate mouse models of retinal inflammation and injury. Concomitantly, its endogenous ligand, diazepam-binding inhibitor (DBI), is upregulated in the macroglia of the mouse retina such as astrocytes and Müller cells. In addition, we discover that TSPO-mediated signaling in microglia via DBI-derived ligands negatively regulates features of microgl...
Microglia: Key Players in Retinal Ageing and Neurodegeneration
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 2022
Microglia are the resident immune cells of the central nervous system (CNS) and play a key role in maintaining the normal function of the retina and brain. During early development, microglia migrate into the retina, transform into a highly ramified phenotype, and scan their environment constantly. Microglia can be activated by any homeostatic disturbance that may endanger neurons and threaten tissue integrity. Once activated, the young microglia exhibit a high diversity in their phenotypes as well as their functions, which relate to either beneficial or harmful consequences. Microglial activation is associated with the release of cytokines, chemokines, and growth factors that can determine pathological outcomes. As the professional phagocytes in the retina, microglia are responsible for the clearance of pathogens, dead cells, and protein aggregates. However, their phenotypic diversity and phagocytic capacity is compromised with ageing. This may result in the accumulation of protein...
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2018
Retinal detachment (RD) is a sight-threatening complication common in many highly prevalent retinal disorders. RD rapidly leads to photoreceptor cell death beginning within 12 h following detachment. In patients with sustained RD, progressive visual decline due to photoreceptor cell death is common, leading to significant and permanent loss of vision. Microglia are the resident immune cells of the central nervous system, including the retina, and function in the homeostatic maintenance of the neuro-retinal microenvironment. It is known that microglia become activated and change their morphology in retinal diseases. However, the function of activated microglia in RD is incompletely understood, in part because of the lack of microglia-specific markers. Here, using the newly identified microglia marker P2ry12 and microglial depletion strategies, we demonstrate that retinal microglia are rapidly activated in response to RD and migrate into the injured area within 24 h post-RD, where the...
Microglia Inhibition Delays Retinal Degeneration Due to MerTK Phagocytosis Receptor Deficiency
Frontiers in Immunology, 2020
Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) is a group of inherited retinal diseases characterized by progressive loss of rod followed by cone photoreceptors. An especially early onset form of RP with blindness in teenage years is caused by mutations in mertk, the gene encoding the clearance phagocytosis receptor Mer tyrosine kinase (MerTK). The cause for blindness in mutant MerTK-associated RP (mutMerTK-RP) is the failure of retinal pigment epithelial cells in diurnal phagocytosis of spent photoreceptor outer segment debris. However, the early onset and very fast progression of degeneration in mutMerTK-RP remains unexplained. Here, we explored the role of microglia in the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) rat model of mutMerTK-RP. We found elevated levels of inflammatory cytokines and CD68 microglia activation marker, and more ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule 1 (Iba-1) positive microglia in RCS retina when compared to wild-type retina as early as postnatal day 14 (P14). Strikingly, renewal of photoreceptor outer segments in P14 wild-type rat retina is still immature with low levels of RPE phagocytosis implying that at this early age lack of this process in RCS rats is unlikely to distress photoreceptors. Although the total number of Iba-1 positive retinal microglia remains constant from P14 to P30, we observed increasing numbers of microglia in the outer retina from P20 implying migration to the outer retina before onset of photoreceptor cell death at ∼P25. Iba-1 and CD68 levels also increase in the retina during this time period suggesting microglia activation. To determine whether microglia affect the degenerative process, we suppressed retinal microglia in vivo using tamoxifen or a combination of tamoxifen and liposomal clodronate. Treatments partly prevented elevation of Iba-1 and CD68 and relocalization of microglia. Moreover, treatments led to partial but significant retention of photoreceptor viability and photoreceptor function. We conclude that loss of the phagocytosis receptor MerTK causes microglia activation and relocalization in the retina before lack of RPE phagocytosis causes overt retinal degeneration, and that microglia activities accelerate loss of photoreceptors in mutMerTK-RP. These results suggest that therapies targeting microglia may delay onset and slow the progression of this blinding disease.
Experimental Eye Research, 2003
Many gaps exist in our knowledge of human retinal microglia in health and disease. We address the hypothesis that primary death of rod photoreceptors leads to activation of resident microglia in human retinas with retinitis pigmentosa (RP), late-onset retinal degeneration (L-ORD), or age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Regions of ongoing photoreceptor cell death were studied by immunocytochemistry with microglia-and other retinal cell-specific markers. In normal human retinas, quiescent microglia were small, stellate cells associated with inner retinal blood vessels. In retinas with RP, LORD , or AMD, numerous activated microglia were present in the outer nuclear layer in regions of ongoing rod cell death. These microglia were enlarged, amoeboid cells that contained rhodopsin-positive cytoplasmic inclusions. We conclude that activated microglia migrate to the outer nuclear layer and remove rod cell debris. In other central nervous system diseases such as stroke, activated microglia phagocytose debris from the primary injury and also secrete molecules that kill nearby normal neurons. By analogy with these diseases, we suggest that microglia activated by primary rod cell death may kill adjacent photoreceptors. Activated microglia may be a missing link in understanding why initial rod cell death in the human diseases RP, LORD , and AMD leads to death of the cones that are critical for high acuity daytime vision.
The American Journal of Pathology, 2008
The role of microglia in neurodegeneration is controversial, although microglial activation in the retina has been shown to provide an early response against infection, injury, ischemia, and degeneration. Here we show that endogenous bone marrow (BM)-derived microglia play a protective role in vascular and neural degeneration in the retinitis pigmentosa model of inherited retinal degeneration. BM-derived cells were recruited to the degenerating retina where they differentiated into microglia and subsequently localized to the degenerating vessels and neurons. Inhibition of stromal-derived factor-1 in the retina reduced the number of BM-derived microglia and accelerated the rate of neurovascular degeneration. Systemic depletion of myeloid progenitors also accelerated the degenerative process. Conversely, activation of BM-derived myeloid progenitors by systemic administration of both granulocyte colony-stimulating factor and erythropoietin resulted in the deceleration of retinal degeneration and the promotion of cone cell survival. These data indicate that BM-derived microglia may play a protective role in retinitis pigmentosa. Functional activation of BM-derived myeloid progenitors by cytokine therapy may provide a novel strategy for the treatment of inherited retinal degeneration and other neurodegenerative diseases, regardless of the underlying genetic defect.
Cells
The retina is a highly metabolically active tissue with high-level consumption of nutrients and oxygen. This high metabolic demand requires a properly developed and maintained vascular system. The retina is nourished by two systems: the central retinal artery that supplies the inner retina and the choriocapillaris that supplies the outer retina and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Pathological neovascularization, characterized by endothelial cell proliferation and new vessel formation, is a common hallmark in several retinal degenerative diseases, including age-related macular degeneration (AMD). A limited number of studies have suggested that microglia, the resident immune cells of the retina, have an important role not only in the pathology but also in the formation and physiology of the retinal vascular system. Here, we review the current knowledge on microglial interaction with the retinal vascular system under physiological and pathological conditions. To do so, we first highl...