| Literature DB >> 33080394 |
Marianne Berdugo1, Kimberley Delaunay1, Marie-Christine Naud1, Justine Guegan2, Alexandre Moulin3, Michèle Savoldelli4, Emilie Picard1, Lolita Radet1, Laurent Jonet1, Zoubir Djerada5, Claire Gozalo5, Alejandra Daruich6, Jacques Beltrand7, Jean-Claude Jeanny1, Elsa Kermorvant-Duchemin8, Patricia Crisanti1, Michel Polak7, Francine Behar-Cohen9.
Abstract
Sulfonylureas, widely used as hypoglycemic agents in adults with type 2 diabetes, have neuroprotective effects in preclinical models of central nervous system injury, and in children with neuropsychomotor impairments linked to neonatal diabetes secondary to ATP-sensitive potassium channel mutations. In the human and rodent retina, we show that the glibenclamide-activated channel sulfonylurea receptor 1 (SUR1) is expressed in the retina and enriched in the macula; we also show that it colocalizes with the potassium channel Kir6.2, and with the cation channel transporter TRPM4. Glibenclamide (glyburide), administered at doses that did not decrease the glycemia, or injected directly into the eye, protected the structure and the function of the retina in various models of retinal injury that recapitulate the pathogenic neurodegenerative events in the diabetic retina. The downregulation of SUR1 using a siRNA suppressed the neuroprotective effects of glibenclamide on excitotoxic stress-induced cell death. The glibenclamide effects include the transcriptional regulation of antioxidant and neuroprotective genes. Ocular glibenclamide could be repurposed for diabetic retinopathy.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33080394 DOI: 10.1016/j.trsl.2020.10.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Res ISSN: 1878-1810 Impact factor: 7.012