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1.
The role of cell adhesion molecules in neurite outgrowth on Müller cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The roles of neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM), L1, N-cadherin, and integrin in neurite outgrowth on various substrates were studied. Antibodies against these cell surface molecules were added to explants of chick retina and the neurites from retinal ganglion cells were examined for effects of the antibodies on neurite length and fasciculation. On laminin, an anti-integrin antibody completely inhibited neurite outgrowth. The same antibody did not inhibit neurite outgrowth on polylysine or Müller cells. Antibodies to NCAM, L1, and N-cadherin did not significantly inhibit neurite outgrowth on laminin but produced significant inhibition on Müller cells. The inhibition of neurite outgrowth on glia by anti-L1 antibodies supports the hypothesis that L1 is capable of acting in a heterophilic binding mechanism. On laminin, both anti-N-cadherin and anti-L1 caused defasciculation of neurites from retinal ganglion cells, while anti-NCAM did not. None of these antibodies produced defasciculation on Müller cells. The results indicate that these three cell adhesion molecules may be very important in interactions with glia as axons grow from the retina to the tectum and may be less important in axon-axon interactions along this pathway. No evidence was found supporting the role of integrins in axon growth on Müller cells.  相似文献   

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3.
Mammalian Müller glial cells are major glial cells in the retina. Here we report that these glial cells can be redirected towards a neuronal lineage by an aggregate-culture in vitro. Rat and macaque Müller glial cells did not express neuronal markers except after transfer to adhesive conditions. Furthermore, this expression could only take place in the presence of platelet-derived growth factor and valproic acid. We compared a normal monolayer-culture and an aggregate-culture, and rat Müller glial cells could only differentiate into neurons under non-adhesive conditions. However, Müller glial cells did not express the photoreceptor markers in vitro. After transplantation into the subretinal space, a retina-specific niche, rat Müller glial cells expressed the photoreceptor-specific marker, opsin (RET-P1). We demonstrate the potential of mammalian Müller glial cells as a source of photoreceptors, which may possibly contribute to the treatment of degenerative retinal diseases such as retinitis pigmentosa.  相似文献   

4.
Glycogen has an important role in energy handling in several brain regions. In the brain, glycogen is localized in astrocytes and its role in several normal and pathological processes has been described, whereas in the retina, glycogen metabolism has been scarcely investigated. The enzyme glycogen phosphorylase has been located in retinal Müller cells; however the cellular location of glycogen synthase (GS) and its regulatory partner, glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β), has not been investigated. Our aim was to localize these enzymes in the rat retina by immunofluorescence techniques. We found both GS and GSK3β in Müller cells in the synaptic layers, and within the inner segments of photoreceptor cells. The presence of these enzymes in Müller cells suggests that glycogen could be regulated within the retina as in other tissues. Indeed, we showed that glycogen content in the whole retina in vitro was increased by high glucose concentrations, glutamate, and insulin. In contrast, retina glycogen levels were not modified by norepinephrine nor by depolarization with high KCl concentrations. Insulin also induced an increase in glycogen content in cultured Müller cells. The effect of insulin in both, whole retina and cultured Müller cells was blocked by inhibitors of phosphatidyl-inositol 3-kinase, strongly suggesting that glycogen content in retina is modulated by the insulin signaling pathway. The expression of GS and GSK3β in the synaptic layers and photoreceptor cells suggests an important role of GSK3β regulating glycogen synthase in neurons, which opens multiple feasible roles of insulin within the retina.  相似文献   

5.
Indirect evidence suggests that the Müller/glial cell water channel aquaporin-4 (AQP4) modulates K(+) channel function of the closely associated Kir4.1 protein. We used patch clamp to compare Kir4.1 K(+) channel function in freshly isolated Müller cells from retinas of wild-type (+/+) and AQP4 knock-out (-/-) mice. Immunocytochemistry showed a comparable Kir4.1 protein expression pattern in Müller cells from +/+ and -/- retinas, with greatest expression at their end feet. Osmotic water permeability was >4-fold reduced in -/- than in +/+ Müller cells. Resting membrane potential did not differ significantly in +/+ versus -/- Müller cells (-64 +/- 1 versus -64 +/- 1 mV, S.E., n = 24). Whole-cell K(+) currents recorded with a micropipette inserted into the cell soma were Ba(2+)-sensitive and showed no significant differences in magnitude in +/+ versus -/- Müller cells (1.3 +/- 0.1 versus 1.2 +/- 0.1 nA at -160 mV) or in inwardly rectifying current-voltage relationships. Spatially resolved K(+) currents generated by pulsed K(+) injections along Müller cell bodies were also comparable in +/+ versus -/- Müller cells. Single-channel cell-attached patch clamp showed comparable unitary conductance, current-voltage data, and open probability in +/+ versus -/- Müller cells. Thus, contrary to the generally accepted view, our results provide direct evidence against functionally significant AQP4 modulation of Müller cell Kir4.1 K(+) channel function.  相似文献   

6.
Müller glia have been demonstrated to display stem-cell properties after retinal damage. Here, we report this potential can be regulated by Sonic hedgehog (Shh) signaling. Shh can stimulate proliferation of Müller glia through its receptor and target gene expressed on them, furthermore, Shh-treated Müller glia are induced to dedifferentiate by expressing progenitor-specific markers, and then adopt cell fate of rod photoreceptor. Inhibition of signaling by cyclopamine inhibits proliferation and dedifferentiation. Intraocular injection of Shh promotes Müller glia activation in the photoreceptor-damaged retina, Shh also enhances neurogenic potential by producing more rhodopsin-positive photoreceptors from Müller glia-derived cells. Together, these results provide evidences that Müller glia act as potential stem cells in mammalian retina, Shh may have therapeutic effects on these cells for promoting the regeneration of retinal neurons.  相似文献   

7.
Labeling for zinc transporter protein-3 (ZnT-3), which can be found localized to glutamatergic vesicles elsewhere in the nervous system, has revealed an unexpectedly high concentration of this transporter protein in the outer limiting membrane region of the murine retina, a region that contains the mitochondria-rich portion of photoreceptor inner segments and is not involved with vesicle release. Having suggested the possibility that Müller cell apical villi forming the outer limiting membrane may be associated with the labeling observed, we used immunohistochemical techniques to look for ZnT-3 labeling of Müller cells isolated from rat and mouse retinas. With DAB labeling, rat Müller cell apical villi, soma, and endfeet exhibited ZnT-3 reactivity. FITC label and confocal analysis revealed that ZnT-3 protein appeared throughout the length of mouse Müller cells. We conclude from these observations that the dense labeling for ZnT-3 in the photoreceptor inner segment region of murine retinal slices is due to labeling of ZnT-3 protein associated with Müller cell apical villi. Based on these findings we suggest that Müller cells utilize ZnT-3 to regulate retinal zinc homeostasis and that this role is important to mitochondrial function in the photoreceptor inner segments.  相似文献   

8.
As one of the common and serious chronic complications of diabetes mellitus (DM), the related mechanism of diabetic retinopathy (DR) has not been fully understood. Müller cell reactive gliosis is one of the early pathophysiological features of DR. Therefore, exploring the manner to reduce diabetes-induced Müller cell damage is essential to delay DR. Thioredoxin 1 (Trx1), one of the ubiquitous redox enzymes, plays a vital role in redox homeostasis via protein–protein interactions, including apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1). Previous studies have shown that upregulation of Trx by some drugs can attenuate endoplasmic reticulum stress (ERS) in DR, but the related mechanism was unclear. In this study, we used DM mouse and high glucose (HG)-cultured human Müller cells as models to clarify the effect of Trx1 on ERS and the underlying mechanism. The data showed that the diabetes-induced Müller cell damage was increased significantly. Moreover, the expression of ERS and reactive gliosis was also upregulated in diabetes in vivo and in vitro. However, it was reversed after Trx1 overexpression. Besides, ERS-related protein expression, reactive gliosis, and apoptosis were decreased after transfection with ASK1 small-interfering RNA in stable Trx1 overexpression Müller cells after HG treatment. Taken together, Trx1 could protect Müller cells from diabetes-induced damage, and the underlying mechanism was related to inhibited ERS via ASK1.  相似文献   

9.
The expression of gangliosides of the lactosylceramide (LC) and of the gangliotetraosylceramide (GTC) series on the surface of cells from the chick neural retina was investigated by double-color indirect immunofluorescence. GD3 was assumed to be representative of LC and was detected using a specific monoclonal antibody. GM1 was assumed to be representative of GTC and was detected using the binding of cholera toxin followed by the binding of cholera toxin antibodies. The expression of polysialosylated GTC (polysialosyl-GTC) was detected using the cholera toxin-cholera toxin antibody experimental approach, after conversion of polysialosyl-GTC to GM1 by treatment of the cells with neuraminidase. In retinas from 6-day-old embryos (R6), most cells (approximately 80%) expressed GD3 but not GTC. After culturing for 7 days, (R6+7), the expression of GTC was found confined to neuron-like cells; flat cells derived from Müller cells expressed GD3 but were negative for GTC expression. On the other hand, postmitotic Müller cells obtained from 13-day-old embryo (R13) or 1-day-old hatched chick retina (RP1) expressed GD3, GM1, and polysialosyl-GTC but were unable to maintain the expression of these GTCs when kept in culture for several days. According to these results, retinal cells can be defined on the basis of their ganglioside expression as follows: (a) retinoblasts, by the expression of GD3; (b) postmitotic neuronal cells, by the expression of GTC; and (c) postmitotic Müller cells, by the expression of GD3 and GTC.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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11.
The viability of retinal ganglion cells (RGC) is essential for the maintenance of visual function. RGC homeostasis is maintained by the surrounding retinal glial cells, the Müller cells, which buffer the extracellular concentration of neurotransmitters and provide the RGCs with energy. This study evaluates if glucose-deprivation of Müller cells interferes with their ability to remove glutamate from the extracellular space. The human Müller glial cell line, Moorfields/Institute of Ophthalmology-Müller 1, was used to study changes in glutamate uptake. Excitatory amino acid transporter (EAAT) proteins were up-regulated in glucose-deprived Müller cells and glutamate uptake was significantly increased in the absence of glucose. The present findings revealed an up-regulation of EAAT1 and EAAT2 in glucose-deprived Müller cells as well as an increased ability to take up glutamate. Hence, glucose deprivation may result in an increased ability to protect RGCs from glutamate-induced excitotoxicity, whereas malfunction of glutamate uptake in Müller cells may contribute to retinal neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

12.
The retina in adult mammals, unlike those in lower vertebrates such as fish and amphibians, is not known to support neurogenesis. However, when injured, the adult mammalian retina displays neurogenic changes, raising the possibility that neurogenic potential may be evolutionarily conserved and could be exploited for regenerative therapy. Here, we show that Müller cells, when retrospectively enriched from the normal retina, like their radial glial counterparts in the central nervous system (CNS), display cardinal features of neural stem cells (NSCs), i.e., they self-renew and generate all three basic cell types of the CNS. In addition, they possess the potential to generate retinal neurons, both in vitro and in vivo. We also provide direct evidence, by transplanting prospectively enriched injury-activated Müller cells into normal eye, that Müller cells have neurogenic potential and can generate retinal neurons, confirming a hypothesis, first proposed in lower vertebrates. This potential is likely due to the NSC nature of Müller cells that remains dormant under the constraint of non-neurogenic environment of the adult normal retina. Additionally, we demonstrate that the mechanism of activating the dormant stem cell properties in Müller cells involves Wnt and Notch pathways. Together, these results identify Müller cells as latent NSCs in the mammalian retina and hence, may serve as a potential target for cellular manipulation for treating retinal degeneration.  相似文献   

13.
Exposure of isolated retinas to 30 microM D-aspartate, which is a substrate for all high affinity glutamate transporters, for 30 min, resulted in the accumulation of such D-aspartate into Müller glial cells but not glutamatergic neurons as evinced by immunocytochemistry for D-aspartate. Further incubation of such loaded retinas in physiological media, in the absence of D-aspartate, resulted in the slow release of accumulated D-aspartate from the Müller cells and its accumulation into populations of photoreceptors and bipolar cells. This result indicates that after initial transport into Müller cells, reversal of direction of transport of D-aspartate, and thus by inference glutamate, by GLAST, readily occurs. D-aspartate released by Müller cells was strongly accumulated into cone photoreceptors which are known to express GLT-1, and into rod photoreceptors which we demonstrate here to express the retina specific glutamate transporter EAAT5 (excitatory amino transporter 5). Populations of glutamatergic bipolar cells, which express GLT-1 also exhibited avid uptake of D-aspartate. We conclude that the Müller cell glutamate transporter GLAST is responsible for most of the initial glutamate clearance in the retina after its release from neurones. However, some glutamate is also returned from Müller cells, to neurons expressing GLT-1 and EAAT5, albeit at a slow rate. These data suggest that the role of neuronal glutamate transporters in the retina may be to facilitate a slow process of recycling glutamate back from Müller cells to neurons after its initial clearance from perisynaptic regions by GLAST.  相似文献   

14.
Müller cells are closely related to diabetic retinopathy (DR). Aquaporin-4 (AQP4) can effectively promote the diffusion of water across cellular membranes. However, the dynamic balance of water plays key role in many diseases, such as cerebral edema. Meanwhile, the unusual expression and distribution of AQP4 in the retina are the significant causes of ocular hypertension and reperfusion injury. To explore the functional significance between microRNA-320a (miR-320a) and AQP4 in pathological hypoxia-induced DR related retinal edema, we hypothesized that miR-320a regulates AQP4 expression and internalization to relieve the edema of Müller cells under the pathological retinal hypoxia stress by targeting AQP4, thereby attenuate the damage of Müller cells. Results demonstrated that miR-320a mimics inhibited the expressions of AQP4 in Müller cells. Furthermore, overexpression miR-320a protected Müller cells by suppressing superoxide anion. In addition, overexpression miR-320a markedly attenuated hypoxia-induced injury, significantly increased the cell viability, and promoted the internalization of AQP4. Furthermore, miR-320a can also regulate the stable anchoring of AQP4 on the cell membrane. Our study indicated that miR-320a may be a potential modulator which can mediate AQP4 expression and attenuate the hypoxia damage of Müller cells. In conclusion, miR-320a may be a potential target for DR therapy by targeting AQP4.  相似文献   

15.
Water accumulation in retinal glial (Müller) and neuronal cells resulting in cellular swelling contributes to the development of retinal edema and neurodegeneration. Here, we show that endothelin-1 (ET-1) dose-dependently inhibits the hypoosmotic swelling of Müller cells in freshly isolated retinal slices of control and diabetic rats, with a maximal inhibition at 100 nM. Osmotic Müller cell swelling was also inhibited by ET-2. The effect of ET-1 was mediated by activation of ETA and ETB receptors resulting in transactivation of metabotropic glutamate receptors, purinergic P2Y1, and adenosine A1 receptors. ET-1 (but not ET-2) also inhibited the osmotic swelling of bipolar cells in retinal slices, but failed to inhibit the swelling of freshly isolated bipolar cells. The inhibitory effect of ET-1 on the bipolar cell swelling in retinal slices was abrogated by inhibitors of the FGF receptor kinase (PD173074) and of TGF-β1 superfamily activin receptor-like kinase receptors (SB431542), respectively. Both Müller and bipolar cells displayed immunoreactivities of ETA and ETB receptor proteins. The data may suggest that neuroprotective effects of ETs in the retina are in part mediated by prevention of the cytotoxic swelling of retinal glial and bipolar cells. ET-1 acts directly on Müller cells, while the inhibitory effect of ET-1 on bipolar cell swelling is indirectly mediated, via stimulation of the release of growth factors like bFGF and TGF-β1 from Müller cells.  相似文献   

16.
A precise balance between stimulators and inhibitors of angiogenesis, such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF), respectively, is essential for angiogenic homeostasis in ocular tissues. Retinal hypoxia is accompanied by some pathological conditions that may promote intraocular neovascularization. Here we demonstrate that retinal glial (Müller) cells express and release pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF). Decreasing oxygen concentrations cause strong attenuation of PEDF release resulting in enhanced VEGF/PEDF ratios. Exposure of Müller cells to VEGF suppressed PEDF release in a dose-dependent manner. This may represent a novel mechanism of ocular angiogenic homeostasis sufficient in the control of PEDF levels during normoxia or mild hypoxia but supplemented by other (hitherto unknown) mechanisms in cases of strong hypoxia. In spite of the enhanced VEGF/PEDF ratios resulting from hypoxia, conditioned media of Müller cells failed to stimulate additional proliferation of retinal endothelial cells. These findings suggest that in the ischemic retina, Müller cells generate a permissive condition for angiogenesis by secreting more VEGF and less PEDF, but the onset of retinal endothelial cell proliferation requires another triggering signal that remains to be identified.  相似文献   

17.
Mueiller细胞与视网膜功能   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Mueller细胞是视网膜中的主要胶质细胞。除了一般的支持和营养作用外,近年的许多研究表明,在Mueller细胞和视网膜视风膜神经元之间在着双向的通讯,它们可以直接通过改变细胞外空间神经活性物质的浓度或间接(通过控制神经元的微环境)调制制神经元活动,因此在视网膜功能中起着重要的作用。  相似文献   

18.
Idiopathic epiretinal membranes (ERMs) are fibrocellular membranes containing extracellular matrix proteins and epiretinal cells of retinal and extraretinal origin. iERMs lead to decreased visual acuity and their pathogenesis has not been completely defined. Macroglial Müller cells appear to play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of iERM where they may undergo glial-to-mesenchymal transition (GMT), a transdifferentiation process characterized by the downregulation of Müller cell markers, paralleled by the upregulation of pro-fibrotic myofibroblast markers. Previous observations from our laboratory allowed the molecular identification of two major clusters of iERM patients (named iERM-A and iERM-B), iERM-A patients being characterized by less severe clinical features and a more “quiescent” iERM gene expression profile when compared to iERM-B patients. In the present work, Müller MIO-M1 cells were exposed to vitreous samples obtained before membrane peeling from the same cohort of iERM-A and iERM-B patients. The results demonstrate that iERM vitreous induces proliferation, migration, and GMT in MIO-M1 cells, a phenotype consistent with Müller cell behavior during iERM progression. However, even though the vitreous samples obtained from iERM-A patients were able to induce a complete GMT in MIO-M1 cells, iERM-B samples caused only a partial GMT, characterized by the downregulation of Müller cell markers in the absence of upregulation of pro-fibrotic myofibroblast markers. Together, the results indicate that a relationship may exist among the ability of iERM vitreous to modulate GMT in Müller cells, the molecular profile of the corresponding iERMs, and the clinical features of iERM patients.  相似文献   

19.
The retinal Müller glial cells, can enhance the survival and activity of neurons, especially of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), which are the neurons affected in diseases such as glaucoma, diabetes, and retinal ischemia. It has been demonstrated that Müller glia release neurotrophic factors that support RGC survival, yet many of these factors remain to be elucidated. To define these neurotrophic factors, a quantitative proteomic approach was adopted aiming at identifying neuroprotective proteins. First, the conditioned medium from porcine Müller cells cultured in vitro under three different conditions were isolated and these conditioned media were tested for their capacity to promote survival of primary adult RGCs in culture. Mass spectrometry was used to identify and quantify proteins in the conditioned medium, and osteopontin (SPP1), clusterin (CLU), and basigin (BSG) were selected as candidate neuroprotective factors. SPP1 and BSG significantly enhance RGC survival in vitro, indicating that the survival‐promoting activity of the Müller cell secretome is multifactorial, and that SPP1 and BSG contribute to this activity. Thus, the quantitative proteomics strategy identify proteins secreted by Müller glia that are potentially novel neuroprotectants, and it may also serve to identify other bioactive proteins or molecular markers.  相似文献   

20.
In order to investigate the role of glia in relation to factors that affect the expression of beta-amyloid precursor protein (betaAPP) and B cell lymphoma oncogene protein (Bcl-2) in the central nervous tissue, the patterns of expression of betaAPP and Bcl-2 in developing and mature rat retinas were studied immunocytochemically after intravitreal injection of alpha-aminoadipic acid (alpha-AAA), a glutamate analogue and gliotoxin that is known to cause injury of retinal Müller glial cells. In normal developing retinas, betaAPP and Bcl-2 were expressed primarily but transiently in a small number of neurons in the ganglion cell layer during the first postnatal week. Immunoreactivity of betaAPP and Bcl-2 appeared in the endfeet and proximal part of the radial processes of Müller glial cells from the second postnatal week onwards. In rats that received intravitreal injection of alpha-AAA at birth, there was a loss of immunoreactivity to vimentin, and a delayed expressed on betaAPP or Bcl-2 in Muller glial cells until 3-5 weeks post-injection. Immunoreactive neurons were also observed in the inner retina especially in the ganglion cell layer from 5 to 35 days after injection. A significant reduction in numerical density of cells with large somata in the ganglion cell layer was observed in the neonatally injected retinas at P56, which was accompanied by an increased immunostaining in radial processes of Müller glial cells. In contrast, no detectable changes in the expression of betaAPP and Bcl-2 were observed in retina that received alpha-AAA as adults. These results indicate that the gliotoxin alpha-AAA has long lasting effects on the expression of betaAPP and Bcl-2 in Müller glial cells as well as neurons in the developing but not mature retinas. The loss of vimentin and delayed expression of betaAPP and Bcl-2 in developing Müller glial cells suggests that the metabolic integrity of Müller cells was temporarily compromised, which may have adverse effects on developing neurons that are vulnerable or dependent on trophic support from the Müller glial cells.  相似文献   

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