34 research outputs found

    Modulating GLUT1 Expression in Retinal Pigment Epithelium Decreases Glucose Levels in the Retina: Impact on Photoreceptors and Müller Glial Cells

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    The retina is one of the most metabolically active tissues in the body and utilizes glucose to produce energy and intermediates required for daily renewal of photoreceptor cell outer segments. Glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) facilitates glucose transport across outer blood retinal barrier (BRB) formed by the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and the inner BRB formed by the endothelium. We used conditional knockout mice to study the impact of reducing glucose transport across the RPE on photoreceptor and Müller glial cells. Transgenic mice expressing Cre recombinase under control of the Bestrophin1 (Best1) promoter were bred with Glut1 flox/flox mice to generate Tg-Best1-Cre:Glut1 flox/flox mice (RPE∆Glut1). The RPE∆Glut1 mice displayed a mosaic pattern of Cre expression within the RPE that allowed us to analyze mice with ~50% (RPE∆Glut1 m ) recombination and mice with \u3e70% (RPE∆Glut1 h ) recombination separately. Deletion of GLUT1 from the RPE did not affect its carrier or barrier functions, indicating that the RPE utilizes other substrates to support its metabolic needs thereby sparing glucose for the outer retina. RPE∆Glut1 m mice had normal retinal morphology, function, and no cell death; however, where GLUT1 was absent from a span of RPE greater than 100 µm, there was shortening of the photoreceptor cell outer segments. RPE∆Glut1 h mice showed outer segment shortening, cell death of photoreceptors, and activation of Müller glial cells. The severe phenotype seen in RPE∆Glut1 h mice indicates that glucose transport via the GLUT1 transporter in the RPE is required to meet the anabolic and catabolic requirements of photoreceptors and maintain Müller glial cells in a quiescent state. © 2019, American Physiological Society. All rights reserved

    Myosin 6 Is Required for Iris Development and Normal Function of the Outer Retina

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    PURPOSE. To determine the molecular basis and the pathologic consequences of a chemically induced mutation in the translational vision research models 89 (tvrm89) mouse model with ERG defects. METHODS. Mice from a G3 N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea mutagenesis program were screened for behavioral abnormalities and defects in retinal function by ERGs. The chromosomal position for the recessive tvrm89 mutation was determined in a genome-wide linkage analysis. The critical region was refined, and candidate genes were screened by direct sequencing. The tvrm89 phenotype was characterized by circling behavior, in vivo ocular imaging, detailed ERG-based studies of the retina and RPE, and histological analysis of these structures. RESULTS. The tvrm89 mutation was localized to a region on chromosome 9 containing Myo6. Sequencing identified a TC point mutation in the codon for amino acid 480 in Myo6 that converts a leucine to a proline. This mutation does not confer a loss of protein expression levels; however, mice homozygous for the Myo6 tvrm89 mutation display an abnormal iris shape and attenuation of both strobe-flash ERGs and direct-current ERGs by 4 age weeks, neither of which is associated with photoreceptor loss. CONCLUSIONS. The tvrm89 phenotype mimics that reported for Myosin6-null mice, suggesting that the mutation confers a loss of myosin 6 protein function. The observation that homozygous Myo6 tvrm89 mice display reduced ERG a-wave and b-wave components, as well as components of the ERG attributed to RPE function, indicates that myosin 6 is necessary for the generation of proper responses of the outer retina to light

    US hegemony and the origins of Japanese nuclear power : the politics of consent

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    This paper deploys the Gramscian concepts of hegemony and consent in order to explore the process whereby nuclear power was brought to Japan. The core argument is that nuclear power was brought to Japan as a consequence of US hegemony. Rather than a simple manifestation of one state exerting material ‘power over' another, bringing nuclear power to Japan involved a series of compromises worked out within and between state and civil society in both Japan and the USA. Ideologies of nationalism, imperialism and modernity underpinned the process, coalescing in post-war debates about the future trajectory of Japanese society, Japan's Cold War alliance with the USA and the role of nuclear power in both. Consent to nuclear power was secured through the generation of a psychological state in the public mind combining the fear of nuclear attack and the hope of unlimited consumption in a nuclear-fuelled post-modern world

    Loss of CD40 attenuates experimental diabetes-induced retinal inflammation but does not protect mice from electroretinogram defects

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    Chronic low grade inflammation is considered to contribute to the development of experimental diabetic retinopathy (DR). We recently demonstrated that lack of CD40 in mice ameliorates the upregulation of inflammatory molecules in the diabetic retina and prevented capillary degeneration, a hallmark of experimental diabetic retinopathy. Herein, we investigated the contribution of CD40 to diabetes-induced reductions in retinal function via the electroretinogram (ERG) to determine if inflammation plays a role in the development of ERG defects associated with diabetes. We demonstrate that diabetic CD40-/- mice are not protected from reduction to the ERG b-wave despite failing to upregulate inflammatory molecules in the retina. Our data therefore supports the hypothesis that retinal dysfunction found in diabetics occurs independent of the induction of inflammatory processes

    Photoreceptor Cells Influence Retinal Vascular Degeneration in Mouse Models of Retinal Degeneration and Diabetes.

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    PurposeLoss of photoreceptor cells is associated with retinal vascular degeneration in retinitis pigmentosa, whereas the presence of photoreceptor cells is implicated in vascular degeneration in diabetic retinopathy. To investigate how both the absence and presence of photoreceptors could damage the retinal vasculature, we compared two mouse models of photoreceptor degeneration (opsin-/- and RhoP23H/P23H ) and control C57Bl/5J mice, each with and without diabetes.MethodsRetinal thickness, superoxide, expression of inflammatory proteins, ERG and optokinetic responses, leukocyte cytotoxicity, and capillary degeneration were evaluated at 1 to 10 months of age using published methods.ResultsRetinal photoreceptor cells degenerated completely in the opsin mutants by 2 to 4 months of age, and visual function subsided correspondingly. Retinal capillary degeneration was substantial while photoreceptors were still present, but slowed after the photoreceptors degenerated. Diabetes did not further exacerbate capillary degeneration in these models of photoreceptor degeneration, but did cause capillary degeneration in wild-type animals. Photoreceptor cells, however, did not degenerate in wild-type diabetic mice, presumably because the stress responses in these cells were less than in the opsin mutants. Retinal superoxide and leukocyte damage to retinal endothelium contributed to the degeneration of retinal capillaries in diabetes, and leukocyte-mediated damage was increased in both opsin mutants during photoreceptor cell degeneration.ConclusionsPhotoreceptor cells affect the integrity of the retinal microvasculature. Deterioration of retinal capillaries in opsin mutants was appreciable while photoreceptor cells were present and stressed, but was less after photoreceptors degenerated. This finding proves relevant to diabetes, where persistent stress in photoreceptors likewise contributes to capillary degeneration

    The Circadian Clock Gene Bmal1 Controls Thyroid Hormone-Mediated Spectral Identity and Cone Photoreceptor Function

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    Circadian clocks regulate various aspects of photoreceptor physiology, but their contribution to photoreceptor development and function is unclear. Cone photoreceptors are critical for color vision. Here, we define the molecular function of circadian activity within cone photoreceptors and reveal a role for the clock genes Bmal1 and Per2 in regulating cone spectral identity. ChIP analysis revealed that BMAL1 binds to the promoter region of the thyroid hormone (TH)-activating enzyme type 2 iodothyronine deiodinase (Dio2) and thus regulates the expression of Dio2. TH treatment resulted in a partial rescue of the phenotype caused by the loss of Bmal1, thus revealing a functional relationship between Bmal1 and Dio2 in establishing cone photoreceptor identity. Furthermore, Bmal1 and Dio2 are required to maintain cone photoreceptor functional integrity. Overall, our results suggest a mechanism by which circadian proteins can locally regulate the availability of TH and influence tissue development and function
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