| Literature DB >> 25068073 |
Jeremy Y Yu1, Timothy J Lyons2.
Abstract
Clinical epidemiological studies have revealed relatively weak, yet statistically significant, associations between dyslipidemia/dyslipoproteinemia and diabetic retinopathy (DR). Recent large interventional studies, however, demonstrated an unexpectedly robust efficacy of fenofibrate on the development of DR, possibly independent of plasma lipids. To unify the apparent discrepancies, we hypothesize that plasma lipoproteins play an indirect but important role in DR, contingent on the integrity of the blood-retina-barrier (BRB). In retinas with an intact BRB, plasma lipoproteins may be largely irrelevant; however, important effects become operative after the BRB is impaired in diabetes, leading to lipoprotein extravasation and subsequent modification, hence toxicity to the neighbouring retinal cells. In this hypothesis, BRB leakage is the key, plasma lipoprotein concentrations mainly modulate its consequences, and fenofibrate has intra-retinal actions. This review summarizes our current knowledge of the direct effects and mechanisms of modified lipoproteins on retinal cells and their potential contribution to the pathogenesis of DR.Entities:
Keywords: Blood retina barrier; Diabetic retinopathy; Dyslipidemia; Fenofibrate; Lipoprotein; Oxidized LDL; Pericytes
Year: 2013 PMID: 25068073 PMCID: PMC4109058 DOI: 10.4172/2155-9570.1000314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Exp Ophthalmol
Figure 1A working hypothesis of modified lipoproteins in the pathogenesis of DR. The role of circulating lipoproteins in DR depends on the integrity of BRB. Normally, plasma LDL does not cause retinal damage, but plasma ox- LDL (mostly mildly modified) may contribute to the initial BRB impairment, together with many other metabolic factors that are commonly seen in diabetes. Once the BRB becomes leaky, even in a short period, LDL can extravasate, aggregate, and become progressively modified by oxidation and glycation in the extracellular milieu, resulting in generalized damages to all retinal cell types in proximity. Extravasation of lipoproteins is expected to gradually turn intermittent, transient BRB impairment into a prolonged, chronic pathological state. In this model, fenofibrate may attenuate retinopathy by modulating intra-retinal lipid processing and inflammation, with the efficacy unrelated to its systemic lipid-lowering effect. The retinal pathology caused by extravascular modified lipoproteins is largely isolated from the circulating lipids, consistent with the generally weak association between plasma lipids and DR in epidemiological studies.