Abstract

Glaucoma is an age-related neurodegenerative disease characterized by the progressive loss of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). Chronic ocular hypertension, an important risk factor for glaucoma, leads to RGC axonal injury at the optic nerve head. This insult triggers molecularly distinct cascades governing RGC somal apoptosis and axonal degeneration. The molecular mechanisms activated by ocular hypertensive insult that drive both RGC somal apoptosis and axonal degeneration are incompletely understood. The cellular response to endoplasmic reticulum stress and induction of pro-apoptotic DNA damage inducible transcript 3 (DDIT3, also known as CHOP) have been implicated as drivers of neurodegeneration in many disease models, including glaucoma. RGCs express DDIT3 after glaucoma-relevant insults, and importantly, DDIT3 has been shown to contribute to both RGC somal apoptosis and axonal degeneration after acute induction of ocular hypertension. However, the role of DDIT3 in RGC somal and axonal degeneration has not been critically tested in a model of age-related chronic ocular hypertension. Here, we investigated the role of DDIT3 in glaucomatous RGC death using an age-related, naturally occurring ocular hypertensive mouse model of glaucoma, DBA/2J mice (D2). To accomplish this, a null allele of Ddit3 was backcrossed onto the D2 background. Homozygous Ddit3 deletion did not alter gross retinal or optic nerve head morphology, nor did it change the ocular hypertensive profile of D2 mice. In D2 mice, Ddit3 deletion conferred mild protection to RGC somas, but did not significantly prevent RGC axonal degeneration. Together, these data suggest that DDIT3 plays a minor role in perpetuating RGC somal apoptosis caused by chronic ocular hypertension-induced axonal injury, but does not significantly contribute to distal axonal degeneration.

Highlights

  • Glaucoma is an age-related neurodegenerative disease characterized by the death of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), the output neurons of the retina

  • We found DDIT3 played a minor role in RGC somal death but not axonal degeneration in the DBA/2J (D2) mouse model of chronic, age-related ocular hypertension[3,5,34,35,36]

  • Ocular hypertension is thought to injure RGCs as they exit the eye at the lamina cribrosa[1,2,3,4,5]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Glaucoma is an age-related neurodegenerative disease characterized by the death of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), the output neurons of the retina. An important risk factor for glaucomatous RGC death is elevated intraocular pressure (IOP), which leads to RGC axonal injury at the lamina cribrosa[1,2,3,4,5] (termed the glial lamina in mice[5]). This insult is thought to trigger molecular. As a pro-apoptotic transcription factor upstream of BAX, DDIT3 may be an important regulator of RGC death after glaucomatous insult

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call