| Literature DB >> 35054919 |
Alicia A Brunet1,2, Alan R Harvey3,4, Livia S Carvalho1,2.
Abstract
Inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are a leading cause of blindness. To date, 260 disease-causing genes have been identified, but there is currently a lack of available and effective treatment options. Cone photoreceptors are responsible for daylight vision but are highly susceptible to disease progression, the loss of cone-mediated vision having the highest impact on the quality of life of IRD patients. Cone degeneration can occur either directly via mutations in cone-specific genes (primary cone death), or indirectly via the primary degeneration of rods followed by subsequent degeneration of cones (secondary cone death). How cones degenerate as a result of pathological mutations remains unclear, hindering the development of effective therapies for IRDs. This review aims to highlight similarities and differences between primary and secondary cone cell death in inherited retinal diseases in order to better define cone death mechanisms and further identify potential treatment options.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; autophagy; cell death; epigenetic; immunological effects; inherited retinal diseases; necroptosis; oxidative stress; treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35054919 PMCID: PMC8775779 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23020726
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Interactions between the major pathways of cell death: autophagy, extrinsic apoptosis, intrinsic apoptosis, and necroptosis. Apoptosis can be initiated via binding of ligands FasL, TRAIL, or TNFα to their corresponding death receptor (extrinsic pathway) or via intracellular stress to the mitochondria (intrinsic pathway). Binding of FasL or TRAIL engages FADD and pro-caspase 8 to form the DISC complex, cleaving and activating caspase-8 to initiate downstream executioner caspase-3, -6, and -7. Activation of the proteolytic executioner caspases ultimately results in apoptosis. Binding of TNFα to its respective receptor, TNFR1, initiates formation of complex I (TRADD, cIAP, RIP1, TRAF2). TRADD and RIP1 recruit procaspase-8 and FADD to form complex II. Complex II can further go down the apoptosis pathway by activating caspase-8 or the necroptosis pathway by inhibiting caspase-8 when bound to RIP1, RIP3, FADD, and TRADD. Phosphorylation of RIP1, RIP3 and MLKL results in necroptosis. Intrinsic apoptosis can occur when there is an intracellular stressor causing mitochondrial dysfunctional, resulting in BAX/BAK activation and cytochrome c leakage when pro-survival markers BCL2 and BCL-XL are inactivated. Cytochrome c binds to APAF1 and procaspase-9 to form the apoptosome and downstream activation of executioner caspase to induce apoptosis. The autophagy process is initiated when there is a decrease in mTOR, causing activation of the Unc-51 like autophagy activating kinase 1 (ULK1) complex and further the Beclin complex. ATG5, -12, and -16 congregate to initiate the elongation process of autophagosome formation, inducing autophagy. Autophagy proteins interact with pro-survival proteins in that BCL2 blocks Beclin complex formation, whilst ATG12 blocks BCL2 and ATG5 blocks BCL-XL.
Figure 2Theorised mechanism of secondary cone degeneration. In healthy retina, rods produce RdCVF to support cone function by binding to BSG1, allowing glucose to enter the cones via the GLUT1 receptor. When rods are degenerated as a result of disease, RdCVF is no longer produced and the cone GLUT1 receptor remains inactive. Dysregulation of glucose uptake into cones causes a decrease in mTOR, and cones begin to degenerate secondary to the loss of rods.
Figure 3ER stress pathways through activation of transmembrane ER proteins to induce cell death. PERK and ATF6 triggers CHOP activation, blocking pro-survival proteins BCL2 and BCL-XL, and inducing mitochondria-mediated cell death. CHOP can also act on IP3R to release Ca2+ from the ER, leading to further mitochondrial dysfunction and autophagy-mediated cell death. IRE1 interacts with TRAF2 to activate the JNK pathway, blocking pro-survival proteins and increasing autophagy activity. ATF4: activating transcription factor 4; ATF6: activating transcription factor 6; BAK: Bcl-2 homologous antagonist killer; BAX: Bcl-2-associated X protein; BCL2: B-cell lymphoma-2; BCL-XL: B-cell lymphoma-extra large; BIM; Bcl-2-like protein 11; CaMKII: Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II; CHOP: CCAAT-enhancer-binding protein homologous protein; eIF2α: eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2α; IP3R: inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor; IRE1: inositol-requiring enzyme 1; JNK: C-Jun N-terminal kinase; mTOR; mammalian target of rapamycin; NOXA: phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetated-induced protein 1, also known as (PMAIP1); PERK: protein kinase RNA-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase; TRAF2: TNFR1-associated factor 2; ULK1: Unc-51 like autophagy activating kinase 1.
Potential mutation-independent treatments for IRDs which showed preserved cone and/or rod survival in animal models.
| Cellular Process | Method | Model |
|---|---|---|
| Apoptosis | ↓ Calpain | |
| Necroptosis | ↓ RIP3 | |
| Autophagy | ↑ RdCVF | |
| ↑ mTOR | ||
| Oxidative Stress | ↓ ROS | |
| Endoplasmic | ↓ PKG | |
| TUDCA | ||
| Epigenetic Changes | ↓ HDACs | |
| Immunological | Müller glia | |
| Microglia |
↓ Decrease in expression; ↑ Increase in expression