| Literature DB >> 27535749 |
Eduardo Maria Normando1,2,3, Benjamin Michael Davis3, Lies De Groef3,4, Shereen Nizari3, Lisa A Turner3, Nivedita Ravindran3, Milena Pahlitzsch3, Jonathan Brenton3, Giulia Malaguarnera3, Li Guo3, Satyanarayana Somavarapu5, Maria Francesca Cordeiro6,7,8.
Abstract
Parkinson's Disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disease worldwide, affecting 1 % of the population over 65 years of age. Dopaminergic cell death in the substantia nigra and accumulation of Lewy bodies are the defining neuropathological hallmarks of the disease. Neuronal death and dysfunction have been reported in other central nervous system regions, including the retina. Symptoms of PD typically manifest only when more than 70 % of dopaminergic cells are lost, and the definitive diagnosis of PD can only be made histologically at post-mortem, with few biomarkers available.In this study, a rotenone-induced rodent model of PD was employed to investigate retinal manifestations in PD and their usefulness in assessing the efficacy of a novel therapeutic intervention with a liposomal formulation of the PPAR-γ (Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma) agonist rosiglitazone.Retinal assessment was performed using longitudinal in vivo imaging with DARC (detection of apoptosing retinal cells) and OCT (optical coherence tomography) technologies and revealed increased RGCs (Retinal Ganglion Cells) apoptosis and a transient swelling of the retinal layers at day 20 of the rotenone insult. Follow-up of this model demonstrated characteristic histological neurodegenerative changes in the substantia nigra and striatum by day 60, suggesting that retinal changes precede the "traditional" pathological manifestations of PD. The therapeutic effect of systemic administration of different formulations of rosiglitazone was then evaluated, both in the retina and the brain. Of all treatment regimen tested, sustained release administration of liposome-encapsulated rosiglitazone proved to be the most potent therapeutic strategy, as evidenced by its significant neuroprotective effect on retinal neurons at day 20, and on nigrostriatal neurons at day 60, provided convincing evidence for its potential as a treatment for PD.Our results demonstrate significant retinal changes occurring in this model of PD. We show that rosiglitazone can efficiently protect retinal neurons from the rotenone insult, and that systemic administration of liposome-encapsulated rosiglitazone has an enhanced neuroprotective effect on the retina and CNS (Central Nervous System). To our knowledge, this is the first in vivo evidence of RGCs loss and early retinal thickness alterations in a PD model. Together, these findings suggest that retinal changes may be a good surrogate biomarker for PD, which may be used to assess new treatments both experimentally and clinically.Entities:
Keywords: DARC; Parkinson’s disease; Retina; Rosiglitazone; Rotenone
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27535749 PMCID: PMC4989531 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-016-0346-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1Natural history of rotenone-induced retinal degeneration. a Schematic overview of the treatment regimens. b Real time in vivo assessment of RGC death by means of DARC reveals a peak in apoptotic cell counts at day 20 of the rotenone treatment scheme. c, d Representative DARC images of vehicle- (control) and rotenone-treated retinas at day 20. e-h Morphometric analysis of the thickness of the whole retina, NRFL, ONL, and photoreceptor IS/OS on OCT images indicates a time-dependent characteristic swelling and thinning of the retinal layers in rotenone- versus vehicle-treated rats
Fig. 2Histological evidence of rotenone-induced neurodegeneration in the SN, striatum and retina. a Quantitative grading of TH immunostaining on coronal sections of the SN reveals that significant loss of dopaminergic neurons is seen at day 60 of the rotenone treatment, yet not at day 10 or 20. b Significantly reduced immunolabeling is also seen in the striatum of rotenone-treated rats at day 60. c Significant increase in Alpha Syinuclein staining was also present in the retina in rotenone treated rats at 60 days. d Representative images of TH immunostainings in the SN and striatum, revealing dopaminergic cell loss after 60 days of rotenone treatment alongside retinal histological section revealing increase in alpha synuclein staining in rotenone treated animals. Scale bar, 500 μm
Fig. 3Rosiglitazone treatment protects retinal cells from rotenone-induced toxicity in rat primary mixed cell cultures and characterisation of a liposomal formulation of rosiglitazone. a AlamarBlue cell viability assays with mixed rat retinal cell cultures were used to determine the IC50 value of rotenone after 48 h exposure. b Rosiglitazone treatment, applied during the second half of the 48 h rotenone insult, conferred dose-dependent neuroprotection to mixed rat retinal cells. Results are representative of three repeated experiments. c 1 % Uranyl acetate stained TEM micrograph of rosiglitazone loaded liposomes. Scale Bar = 200 nm. d UV-absorbance spectra of rosiglitazone dissolved in DMSO demonstrating peak absorbance at 313 nm. e Plot of rosiglitazone concentration in DMSO against absorbance at 313 nm obeys Beer-Lambert’s law up to a concentration of 0.3 mM with a molar extinction coefficient of 4078 L.M-1.cm-1. f Incorporation efficiency of rosiglitazone containing liposomes was assessed spectroscopically before and after removal of unencorporated material by filtration. achieving a formulation incorporation efficiency of 40 % ± 6 % (n = 5)
Fig. 4Real time in vivo evidence for a neuroprotective effect of rosiglitazone on retinal neurons. a Schematic overview of the treatment regimens. b At day 20, DARC imaging reveals significantly reduced counts of apoptotic RGCs in rats that received either 10-days treatment with unencapsulated rosiglitazone (RIG10) or a single administration of liposome-encapsulated rosiglitazone (LER10), compared to rotenone-treated (Rot10) rats. c-f Representative DARC images for each treatment group. g Analysis of retinal thickness variations on OCT images shows that rosiglitazone treatment prevents swelling of the retinal layers at day 20. h Representative OCT images for each treatment group
Fig 5Systemic administration of liposome-encapsulated rosiglitazone (LER) confers neuroprotection to neurons in the retina and in the nigrostriatal pathway. a Schematic overview of the treatment regimens. b Upon administration of liposome-encapsulated rosiglitazone, every 3 days during the 60-days rotenone treatment (LER60), a neuroprotective effect on tyrosine hydroxylase-positive dopaminergic neurons is seen in the SN. This is not the case when daily injections of unencapsulated rosiglitazone are given (RCG60). c A preservative trend of tyrosine hydroxylase-positive efferent fibers in the striatum, in comparison to rotenone only (Rot60), vehicle (empty liposomes) and unencapsulated rosiglitazone (RCG60) rats, is also seen in the striatum