Cargando…

Intravitreal homocysteine-thiolactone injection leads to the degeneration of multiple retinal cells, including photoreceptors

PURPOSE: Hyperhomocysteinemia is known to cause degeneration of retinal ganglion cells, but its influence on photoreceptors remains largely unknown. In particular, the role of homocysteine-thiolactone (Hcy-T)—the physiologic metabolite of homocysteine that has been proven to be more cytotoxic than h...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chang, Han-Hsin, Lin, David Pei-Cheng, Chen, Ying-Shan, Liu, Hsiang-Jui, Lin, Wei, Tsao, Zih-Jay, Teng, Mei-Ching, Chen, Bo-Yie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Vision 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3156793/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21850169
_version_ 1782210239574048768
author Chang, Han-Hsin
Lin, David Pei-Cheng
Chen, Ying-Shan
Liu, Hsiang-Jui
Lin, Wei
Tsao, Zih-Jay
Teng, Mei-Ching
Chen, Bo-Yie
author_facet Chang, Han-Hsin
Lin, David Pei-Cheng
Chen, Ying-Shan
Liu, Hsiang-Jui
Lin, Wei
Tsao, Zih-Jay
Teng, Mei-Ching
Chen, Bo-Yie
author_sort Chang, Han-Hsin
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Hyperhomocysteinemia is known to cause degeneration of retinal ganglion cells, but its influence on photoreceptors remains largely unknown. In particular, the role of homocysteine-thiolactone (Hcy-T)—the physiologic metabolite of homocysteine that has been proven to be more cytotoxic than homocysteine itself—as a factor that causes retinopathy, has not been defined. This study aimed to investigate the toxic effects of excessive Hcy-T in a mouse model. METHODS: A total of 60 six-week-old female ICR mice were used in this study. The mice were divided into 3 experimental groups and 2 control groups. The mice in the experimental groups were subjected to intravitreal injections of Hcy-T to reach final estimated intravitreal concentrations at 5, 25, and 200 μM, respectively. Mice without injection (blank) and with 0.9 NaCl injections (sham injection) were used as controls. The mice with 200 μM Hcy-T were sacrificed at days 7, 15, 45, and 90 after injection and the mice with 5 or 25 μM Hcy-T were sacrificed at day 90, with the controls sacrificed at day 15 or 90 for comparison. Semi-quantitative dot-blot analysis was performed for confirmation of retinal homocysteinylation. The mouse retinas were evaluated microscopically, with the thickness of total and specific retinal layers determined. Immunohistochemical analysis was performed and the labeled cells were quantified to determine the effects of excessive Hcy-T on specific retinal cells. RESULTS: Dose-dependent retinal homocysteinylation after Hcy-T injection was confirmed. The homocysteinylation was localized in the outer and inner segments of photoreceptors and the ganglion cell layer (GCL). Retinal cell degenerations were found in the GCL, inner nuclear layer, and outer nuclear layer at day 90 after 200 µM Hcy-T injection. Significant thickness reduction was found in the total retina, outer nuclear layer, and the outer and inner segment layers. A trend of thickness reduction was also found in the GCL and inner nuclear layer, although this was not statistically significant. The rhodopsin(+) photoreceptors and the calbindin(+) horizontal cells were significantly reduced at day 15, and were nearly ablated at day 90 after 200 μM Hcy-T injection (p<0.001 for both day 15 and day 90), which was not seen in the sham injection controls. The Chx-10(+) or the Islet-1(+) bipolar cells and the Pax-6(+) amacrine cells were severely misarranged at day 90, but no significant reduction was found for both cell types. The GFAP(+) Müller cells were activated at day 15, but were not significantly increased at day 90 after the injection. CONCLUSIONS: Excessive retinal homocysteinylation by Hcy-T, a condition of hyperhomocysteinemia, could lead to degeneration of photoreceptors, which might lead to retinopathies associated with severe hyperhomocysteinemia or diabetes mellitus. Received: April 1, 2011 Accepted: July 14, 2011
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3156793
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Molecular Vision
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-31567932011-08-17 Intravitreal homocysteine-thiolactone injection leads to the degeneration of multiple retinal cells, including photoreceptors Chang, Han-Hsin Lin, David Pei-Cheng Chen, Ying-Shan Liu, Hsiang-Jui Lin, Wei Tsao, Zih-Jay Teng, Mei-Ching Chen, Bo-Yie Mol Vis Research Article PURPOSE: Hyperhomocysteinemia is known to cause degeneration of retinal ganglion cells, but its influence on photoreceptors remains largely unknown. In particular, the role of homocysteine-thiolactone (Hcy-T)—the physiologic metabolite of homocysteine that has been proven to be more cytotoxic than homocysteine itself—as a factor that causes retinopathy, has not been defined. This study aimed to investigate the toxic effects of excessive Hcy-T in a mouse model. METHODS: A total of 60 six-week-old female ICR mice were used in this study. The mice were divided into 3 experimental groups and 2 control groups. The mice in the experimental groups were subjected to intravitreal injections of Hcy-T to reach final estimated intravitreal concentrations at 5, 25, and 200 μM, respectively. Mice without injection (blank) and with 0.9 NaCl injections (sham injection) were used as controls. The mice with 200 μM Hcy-T were sacrificed at days 7, 15, 45, and 90 after injection and the mice with 5 or 25 μM Hcy-T were sacrificed at day 90, with the controls sacrificed at day 15 or 90 for comparison. Semi-quantitative dot-blot analysis was performed for confirmation of retinal homocysteinylation. The mouse retinas were evaluated microscopically, with the thickness of total and specific retinal layers determined. Immunohistochemical analysis was performed and the labeled cells were quantified to determine the effects of excessive Hcy-T on specific retinal cells. RESULTS: Dose-dependent retinal homocysteinylation after Hcy-T injection was confirmed. The homocysteinylation was localized in the outer and inner segments of photoreceptors and the ganglion cell layer (GCL). Retinal cell degenerations were found in the GCL, inner nuclear layer, and outer nuclear layer at day 90 after 200 µM Hcy-T injection. Significant thickness reduction was found in the total retina, outer nuclear layer, and the outer and inner segment layers. A trend of thickness reduction was also found in the GCL and inner nuclear layer, although this was not statistically significant. The rhodopsin(+) photoreceptors and the calbindin(+) horizontal cells were significantly reduced at day 15, and were nearly ablated at day 90 after 200 μM Hcy-T injection (p<0.001 for both day 15 and day 90), which was not seen in the sham injection controls. The Chx-10(+) or the Islet-1(+) bipolar cells and the Pax-6(+) amacrine cells were severely misarranged at day 90, but no significant reduction was found for both cell types. The GFAP(+) Müller cells were activated at day 15, but were not significantly increased at day 90 after the injection. CONCLUSIONS: Excessive retinal homocysteinylation by Hcy-T, a condition of hyperhomocysteinemia, could lead to degeneration of photoreceptors, which might lead to retinopathies associated with severe hyperhomocysteinemia or diabetes mellitus. Received: April 1, 2011 Accepted: July 14, 2011 Molecular Vision 2011-07-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3156793/ /pubmed/21850169 Text en Copyright © 2011 Molecular Vision. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Chang, Han-Hsin
Lin, David Pei-Cheng
Chen, Ying-Shan
Liu, Hsiang-Jui
Lin, Wei
Tsao, Zih-Jay
Teng, Mei-Ching
Chen, Bo-Yie
Intravitreal homocysteine-thiolactone injection leads to the degeneration of multiple retinal cells, including photoreceptors
title Intravitreal homocysteine-thiolactone injection leads to the degeneration of multiple retinal cells, including photoreceptors
title_full Intravitreal homocysteine-thiolactone injection leads to the degeneration of multiple retinal cells, including photoreceptors
title_fullStr Intravitreal homocysteine-thiolactone injection leads to the degeneration of multiple retinal cells, including photoreceptors
title_full_unstemmed Intravitreal homocysteine-thiolactone injection leads to the degeneration of multiple retinal cells, including photoreceptors
title_short Intravitreal homocysteine-thiolactone injection leads to the degeneration of multiple retinal cells, including photoreceptors
title_sort intravitreal homocysteine-thiolactone injection leads to the degeneration of multiple retinal cells, including photoreceptors
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3156793/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21850169
work_keys_str_mv AT changhanhsin intravitrealhomocysteinethiolactoneinjectionleadstothedegenerationofmultipleretinalcellsincludingphotoreceptors
AT lindavidpeicheng intravitrealhomocysteinethiolactoneinjectionleadstothedegenerationofmultipleretinalcellsincludingphotoreceptors
AT chenyingshan intravitrealhomocysteinethiolactoneinjectionleadstothedegenerationofmultipleretinalcellsincludingphotoreceptors
AT liuhsiangjui intravitrealhomocysteinethiolactoneinjectionleadstothedegenerationofmultipleretinalcellsincludingphotoreceptors
AT linwei intravitrealhomocysteinethiolactoneinjectionleadstothedegenerationofmultipleretinalcellsincludingphotoreceptors
AT tsaozihjay intravitrealhomocysteinethiolactoneinjectionleadstothedegenerationofmultipleretinalcellsincludingphotoreceptors
AT tengmeiching intravitrealhomocysteinethiolactoneinjectionleadstothedegenerationofmultipleretinalcellsincludingphotoreceptors
AT chenboyie intravitrealhomocysteinethiolactoneinjectionleadstothedegenerationofmultipleretinalcellsincludingphotoreceptors