| Literature DB >> 35624805 |
Yingying Chen1,2, Nathan J Coorey3, Meixia Zhang1,4, Shaoxue Zeng2, Michele C Madigan2,5, Xinyuan Zhang6,7, Mark C Gillies2, Ling Zhu2, Ting Zhang2.
Abstract
The human retina, which is part of the central nervous system, has exceptionally high energy demands that requires an efficient metabolism of glucose, lipids, and amino acids. Dysregulation of retinal metabolism disrupts local energy supply and redox balance, contributing to the pathogenesis of diverse retinal diseases, including age-related macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, inherited retinal degenerations, and Macular Telangiectasia. A better understanding of the contribution of dysregulated metabolism to retinal diseases may provide better therapeutic targets than we currently have.Entities:
Keywords: gene therapy; lipid metabolism; metabolism; retina; retinal diseases
Year: 2022 PMID: 35624805 PMCID: PMC9137684 DOI: 10.3390/antiox11050942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Main metabolic pathways and their correlations with AMD.
| Metabolic Pathways | Correlations with AMD | References |
|---|---|---|
| Total cholesterol (TC) metabolism | High TC level indicates decreased risk of AMD | [ |
| High TC level at baseline predicts risk of progression, but TC level is low in progressed patients | [ | |
| High-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) metabolism | ABCA1: loci for advanced AMD with genome-wide significance | [ |
| Lipid hydroperoxides metabolism | GPX4: loci for advanced AMD with genome-wide significance | [ |
| The carnitine shuttle pathway | Carnitine shuttle pathway are significantly increased in patients with wet AMD | [ |
| Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) metabolism | eyes with AMD show decreased levels of very long chain-PUFAs (VLC-PUFAs) and low ω-3/ω-6 ratios | [ |
| high intake of ω-3 PUFAs is associated with a reduced risk of early AMD | [ | |
| ω-3 fatty acids have no effect on AMD incidence or progression | [ |
Main metabolic pathways and their correlations with DR.
| Metabolic Pathways | Correlations with Dr | References |
|---|---|---|
| Polyol pathway | Contributes to hyperglycaemia-induced dysfunction of endothelial cells and pericytes | [ |
| Consumes NADPH and NAD+ and causes increased oxidative stress | [ | |
| Increases osmotic pressure and disrupts membrane permeability | [ | |
| Hexosamine pathway | Increases O-linked β- | [ |
| Promotes ER stress, lipid accumulation and inflammatory gene expression and lead to neurodegeneration | [ | |
| Perturbs the neuroprotective effect of insulin, mediated by Akt and via induction of apoptosis | [ | |
| AGEs accumulation | Induces ROS formation, mitochondrial membrane potential loss, intracellular calcium elevation and ER stress response and causes cell death | [ |
| Pentose phosphate pathway | Inhibits the hexosamine and PKC pathways and decreases the formation of AGEs by boosting transketolase | [ |
| The deficiency of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase is related to higher PDR prevalence in type 1 diabetes | [ |