| Literature DB >> 33850097 |
Siddharth Narendran1,2,3, Felipe Pereira1,2,4, Praveen Yerramothu1,2, Ivana Apicella1,2, Shao-Bin Wang1,2, Kameshwari Ambati1,2, Shuichiro Hirahara1,2, Younghee Kim1,2, Meenakshi Ambati1,2,5, Vidya L Ambati5, Peirong Huang1,2, Akhil Varshney1,2, Yosuke Nagasaka1,2, Shinichi Fukuda1,2, Kirstie L Baker6, Kenneth M Marion6, Jan M Deussing7, Srinivas R Sadda6,8, Bradley D Gelfand1,2,9, Jayakrishna Ambati10,11,12,13.
Abstract
Nonfibrillar amyloid-β oligomers (AβOs) are a major component of drusen, the sub-retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) extracellular deposits characteristic of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a common cause of global blindness. We report that AβOs induce RPE degeneration, a clinical hallmark of geographic atrophy (GA), a vision-threatening late stage of AMD that is currently untreatable. We demonstrate that AβOs induce activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome in the mouse RPE in vivo and that RPE expression of the purinergic ATP receptor P2RX7, an upstream mediator of NLRP3 inflammasome activation, is required for AβO-induced RPE degeneration. Two classes of small molecule inflammasome inhibitors-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) and their antiretrovirally inert modified analog Kamuvudines-both inhibit AβOs-induced RPE degeneration. These findings crystallize the importance of P2RX7 and NLRP3 in a disease-relevant model of AMD and identify inflammasome inhibitors as potential treatments for GA.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33850097 PMCID: PMC8044134 DOI: 10.1038/s41392-021-00537-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Signal Transduct Target Ther ISSN: 2059-3635
Fig. 1AβOs promote NLRP3 inflammasome priming and assembly in the RPE. a RPE flat mounts, stained for zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1; red), of Nlrp3-GFP knock-in mice injected subretinally with AβOs show increased GFP expression (green) compared to RPE flat mounts of saline-injected mice, n = 6. b Subretinal injection of AβOs, but not PBS, induced increased ASC speck formation in ASC-CitrineFlox/Best1-Cre+ mice. ASC-Citrine fusion proteins are detected as a green signal. Subretinal injection of AβOs did not induce ASC speck formation in ASC-CitrineFlox mice, n = 6. c Higher magnification images of the observed ASC speck in RPE flat mounts of ASC-CitrineFlox/Best1-Cre+ mice injected with subretinal AβOs demonstrate the size of the specks. Selected areas of interest highlighted by the yellow squares depict the magnified regions. Scale bars (50 μm)
Fig. 2AβOs-induced RPE degeneration is NLRP3 inflammasome dependent. Eyes were treated with a single subretinal injection of 1 μM AβOs. Tissue was collected 7 days after injection. a–e AβOs induced degeneration in WT mice, n = 8 (a) but not in Nlrp3, n = 8 (b), Pycard, n = 8 (c), Casp1, n = 8 (d) or Gsdmd, n = 8 (e) mice. Fundus photographs, top row; Flat mounts stained for zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1; red), bottom row. Degeneration outlined by white arrowheads. Binary (Healthy %) and morphometric (PM, polymegethism (mean (SEM)) quantification of RPE degeneration is shown (Fisher’s exact test for binary; two-tailed t-test for morphometry; *P < 0.001). Loss of regular hexagonal cellular boundaries in ZO-1 stained flat mounts is indicative of degenerated RPE. Scale bars (50 μm)
Fig. 3P2RX7 expression is required for AβOs-induced RPE degeneration. Eyes were treated with a single subretinal injection of 1 μM AβOs. Tissue was collected 7 days after injection. a P2rx7 mice are protected from AβOs-induced RPE degeneration, n = 8. b Lower magnification (left panel) and higher magnification (right panel) of RPE flat mounts of P2rx7 and P2rx7/Best1-Cre+ mice stained with phalloidin (white) and P2RX7 (yellow) demonstrating reduction of P2RX7 signal in the RPE of P2rx7/Best1-Cre+ mice compared to P2rx7 mice. Black arrowhead points to the optic nerve of P2rx7/Best1-Cre+ mice, where expression of P2RX persists in non-RPE tissue. c AβOs induced degeneration in P2rx7 (n = 6) but not in P2rx7/Best1-Cre+ mice (n = 8) (d). Representative images are shown. Fundus photographs, top row; Flat mounts stained for zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1; red), bottom row. Degeneration outlined by white arrowheads. Binary (Healthy %) and morphometric (PM, polymegethism (mean (SEM)) quantification of RPE degeneration is shown (Fisher’s exact test for binary; two-tailed t-test for morphometry; *P < 0.01, **P < 0.001). Loss of regular hexagonal cellular boundaries in ZO-1 stained flat mounts is indicative of degenerated RPE. Scale bars for lower magnification (100 μm) and higher magnification (50 μm)
Fig. 4NRTIs and Kamuvudines inhibit AβOs-induced RPE degeneration. a Fundus photographs (top row) and flat mounts stained for zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1; red) (bottom row) of WT mice injected subretinally with 1 μM AβOs and intravitreously with vehicle or 0.5 nmol of NRTIs/Kamuvudines. Intravitreous administration of 3TC, K-9, AZT, or K-8 blocked AβOs induced RPE degeneration while the vehicle (PBS) did not. Degeneration outlined by white arrowheads. Representative images of n = 6–12. Binary (Healthy %) and morphometric (PM, polymegethism (mean (SEM)) quantification of RPE degeneration is shown (Fisher’s exact test for binary; two-tailed t-test for morphometry; *P < 0.001). Loss of regular hexagonal cellular boundaries in ZO-1 stained flat mounts is indicative of degenerated RPE. Scale bars (50 μm). b Image-guided spectral-domain optical coherence tomography 7 days after subretinal injection of vehicle (left), 1 μM AβOs (middle), and 1 μM AβOs plus intravitreous 0.5 nmol K-8 (right). Black arrowheads point to the injection site, red arrowheads point to RPE degeneration, and white arrowheads point to disruption of the photoreceptor outer segments