Abstract

Degeneration of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) plays a central role in age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Throughout life, RPE cells are challenged by a variety of cytotoxic stressors, some of which are cumulative with age and may ultimately contribute to drusen and lipofuscin accumulation. Stressors such as these continually damage RPE cells resulting in a state of chronic wounding. Current cell-based platforms that model a state of chronic RPE cell wounding are limited, and the RPE cellular response is not entirely understood. Here, we used the electric cell-substrate impedance sensing (ECIS) system to induce a state of acute or chronic wounding on differentiated human fetal RPE cells to analyze changes in the wound repair response. RPE cells surrounding the lesioned area employ both cell migration and proliferation to repair wounds but fail to reestablish their original cell morphology or density after repetitive wounding. Chronically wounded RPE cells develop phenotypic AMD characteristics such as loss of cuboidal morphology, enlarged size, and multinucleation. Transcriptomic analysis suggests a systemic misregulation of RPE cell functions in bystander cells, which are not directly adjacent to the wound. Genes associated with the major RPE cell functions (LRAT, MITF, RDH11) significantly downregulate after wounding, in addition to differential expression of genes associated with the cell cycle (CDK1, CDC6, CDC20), inflammation (IL-18, CCL2), and apoptosis (FAS). Interestingly, repetitive wounding resulted in prolonged misregulation of genes, including FAS, LRAT, and PEDF. The use of ECIS to induce wounding resulted in an over-representation of AMD-associated genes among those dysregulated genes, particularly genes associated with advanced AMD. This simple system provides a new model for further investigation of RPE cell wound response in AMD pathogenesis.

Highlights

  • Retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells are a monolayer of highly specialized pigmented cells residing between the retinal photoreceptors and Bruch’s membrane

  • The impedance steadily increased to a level comparable to the unwounded monolayer within 24 hours, which was confirmed by the continuous ingrowth of RPE cells using time-lapse imaging

  • An in vitro model of chronic wounding and its implication for age-related macular degeneration lesions introduced by high current electrical pulses using the electric cell-substrate impedance sensing (ECIS) system and can repair repetitively induced wounds

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Summary

Introduction

Retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells are a monolayer of highly specialized pigmented cells residing between the retinal photoreceptors and Bruch’s membrane. 12% of early AMD cases develop into an advanced subtype of dry AMD called geographic atrophy (GA), which is characterized by the progressive degeneration of the RPE cells, photoreceptors, and choroidal capillaries near the macular region [14,15,16,17,18]. Early AMD can progress to wet AMD, characterized by choroidal neovascularization (CNV), where neovascular tissues infiltrate the retina. Infiltration of these tissues can interfere with the RPE-photoreceptor interface leading to scarring and may leak fluid into the retina, causing further degeneration and transdifferentiation of RPE cells [20,21,22]

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