| Literature DB >> 33931128 |
Shen Nian1, Amy C Y Lo2, Yajing Mi3, Kai Ren4, Di Yang5.
Abstract
Diabetic retinopathy (DR), one of the common complications of diabetes, is the leading cause of visual loss in working-age individuals in many industrialized countries. It has been traditionally regarded as a purely microvascular disease in the retina. However, an increasing number of studies have shown that DR is a complex neurovascular disorder that affects not only vascular structure but also neural tissue of the retina. Deterioration of neural retina could precede microvascular abnormalities in the DR, leading to microvascular changes. Furthermore, disruption of interactions among neurons, vascular cells, glia and local immune cells, which collectively form the neurovascular unit, is considered to be associated with the progression of DR early on in the disease. Therefore, it makes sense to develop new therapeutic strategies to prevent or reverse retinal neurodegeneration, neuroinflammation and impaired cell-cell interactions of the neurovascular unit in early stage DR. Here, we present current perspectives on the pathophysiology of DR as a neurovascular disease, especially at the early stage. Potential novel treatments for preventing or reversing neurovascular injuries in DR are discussed as well.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetic retinopathy; Gliosis; Inflammation; Neurodegeneration; Neurovascular unit; treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 33931128 PMCID: PMC8088070 DOI: 10.1186/s40662-021-00239-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eye Vis (Lond) ISSN: 2326-0254
Fig. 1The schematic illustrations of the retinal neurovascular unit and cross-section. (a) The schematic illustration of the neurovascular unit in the retina. It is composed of neurons, vascular cells (endothelial cells and pericytes), glia (Müller cells and astrocytes) and related immune cells (microglial cells), forming functional coupling and interactions. Neurons are closely associated with neighboring pericytes, glial cells and microglial cells. Pericytes directly communicate with endothelial cells through peg-socket contacts. Glia and microglial cells are connected with neurons and retinal pericytes. (b) The schematic illustration of a retinal cross-section. The cell bodies of retinal neurons are located in the ganglion cell layer (ganglion cells), inner nuclear layer (amacrine cells, bipolar cells, horizontal cells) and outer nuclear cell (rods and cones). Retinal neurons, glial cells, microglial cells and blood vessels are interactively connected. ILM: internal limiting membrane; GCL: ganglion cell layer; OPL: outer plexiform layer; ONL: outer nuclear layer
Pathological features of the neurovascular unit in diabetic retinopathy (DR)
| Pathological Changes | Characteristics | References |
|---|---|---|
| Neurodegeneration | Loss of retinal ganglion cells and amacrine cells | [ |
| Decrease of NFL, IPL and INL | [ | |
| Reactive gliosis | Activation of astrocytes and Müller cells | [ |
| Death of Müller cells | [ | |
| Microvascular Pathology | Impaired neurovascular coupling | [ |
| Basement membrane thickening | [ | |
| Loss of pericytes | [ | |
| Formation of microaneurysms | [ | |
| Reduction of tight junctions between endothelial cells and apoptosis of endothelial cells | [ | |
| Breakdown of inner BRB | [ | |
| Immuno-inflammation | Leukostasis | [ |
| Activation of microglial cells | [ | |
| Production of inflammatory cytokines (TNFα, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, MCP-1, VEGF) | [ | |
| RPE and Choroid Pathology | Damage of transportation of ions and water in RPE cells | [ |
| Decrease of 11-cis retinal produced in RPE cells | [ | |
| Upregulation of cytokines secreted by RPE cells (VEGF, PDGF, TNFα, IL-6, IL-8,) | [ | |
| Reduction of tight junctions between RPE cells | [ | |
| Breakdown of outer BRB | [ | |
| Choroidal degeneration (decreased choroidal thickness, increased Bruch’s membrane thickness, aneurysms, choroidal neovascularization) | [ |
NFL= nerve fiber layer; IPL= inner plexiform layer; INL= inner nuclear layer; BRB= blood-retinal barrier; TNFα= tumor necrosis factor alpha; IL-1β= interleukin-1beta; IL-6= interleukin-6; IL-8= interleukin-8; MCP-1= monocyte chemoattractant protein 1; VEGF= vascular endothelial growth factor; RPE= retinal pigment epithelium; PDGF= platelet-derived growth factor
Fig. 2The structure of microaneurysms in DR. Ultrastructurally, there are 4 types of microaneurysms: (a) Type I microaneurysms exhibit intact endothelium and basement membrane without the encirclement of pericytes, and circulating leukocytes is extensively accumulated in the lumen; (b) Type II microaneurysms are characterized by the absence of both endothelial cells and pericytes, thickened basement membrane, as well as a multitude of red blood cells inside the lumen; (c) Type III microaneurysms share similar appearances with Type II microaneurysms, but debris of red blood cells are contained; (d) Type IV microaneurysms are in sclerosed forms with heavily thickened basement membrane and fibrous infiltration into the lumen. Moreover, early in DR, retinal neurons undergo apoptotic cell death, accompanied by a decreased number of astrocytes and activation of microglial cells with amoeboid morphology
Summary of potential treatments for diabetic retinopathy (DR)
| Types of Treatments | Major Mechanisms | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neurotrophic factors | PEDF | • Neuroprotection • Anti-oxidative stress • Anti-inflammation • Anti-angiogenesis • Reduction of blood glucose, glutamate excitotoxicity, iNOS level | [ |
| BDNF | [ | ||
| Insulin & IGF-1 | [ | ||
| SST | [ | ||
| GLP-1 | [ | ||
| Anti-oxidants | Flavonoids (Quercetin, Curcumin) | • Anti-oxidative stress • Anti-inflammation • Anti-angiogenesis • Decrease of retinal neurons apoptosis | [ |
| Carotenoids (Lutein, Zeaxanthin) | [ | ||
| Anti- inflammation agents | TNFα antagonist (Etanercept, Adalimumab, Infliximab) | • Decrease of retinal neurons, pericytes and endothelial cells loss • Reduction of inflammatory cytokines level • Inhibition of glial activation and PARP-1 | [ |
| SOCS 1 | [ | ||
| Tetracycline derivatives (Minocycline, Doxycycline) | [ | ||
| Cell replacement | MSC | • Anti-oxidative stress • Anti-inflammation • Decrease of retinal neurons, pericytes and endothelial cells loss • Increase of neurotrophic factors • Differentiation into retinal and vascular cells | [ |
| EPC | [ | ||
| HSC | [ | ||
| iPSC | [ | ||
| Other treatments | Inhibition of iNOS (iNOS knockout Aminoguanidine, Sesamin) | • Decrease of retinal neurons, pericytes and endothelial cells loss • Anti-inflammation • Reduction of blood glucose | [ |
| L-DOPA | • Preservation of retinal functions | [ | |
| ET-1 receptor antagonist (Atrasentan, bosentan ) | • Decrease of retinal neurons, pericytes and endothelial cells loss • Inhibition of glial activation • Neuroprotection | [ | |
PEDF= pigment epithelium-derived factor; BDNF= brain-derived neurotrophic factor; IGF-1= insulin-like growth factor-1; SST= somatostatin; GLP-1= glucagon-like peptide-1; Inos= inducible nitric oxide synthase; TNFα= tumor necrosis factor alpha; SOCS= suppressor of cytokine signaling; PARP-1= poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase-1; MSC= mesenchymal stem cells; EPC= endothelial progenitor cells; HSC= hematopoietic stem cells; iPSC= induced pluripotent stem cells; L-DOPA= L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine; ET-1= endothelin-1