Abstract

Light-induced retinal degeneration (LIRD) in albino rats causes apoptotic photoreceptor cell death. Ceramide is a second messenger for apoptosis. We tested whether increases in ceramide mediate photoreceptor apoptosis in LIRD and if inhibition of ceramide synthesis protects the retina. Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to 2,700 lux white light for 6 h, and the retinal levels of ceramide and its intermediary metabolites were measured by GC-MS or electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry. Enzymes of the de novo biosynthetic and sphingomyelinase pathways of ceramide generation were assayed, and gene expression was measured. The dosage and temporal effect of the ceramide synthase inhibitor FTY720 on the LIRD retina were measured by histological and functional analyses. Retinal ceramide levels increased coincident with the increase of dihydroceramide at various time points after light stress. Light stress in retina induces ceramide generation predominantly through the de novo pathway, which was prevented by systemic administration of FTY720 (10 mg/kg) leading to the protection of retinal structure and function. The neuroprotection of FTY720 was independent of its immunosuppressive action. We conclude that ceramide increase by de novo biosynthesis mediates photoreceptor apoptosis in the LIRD model and that inhibition of ceramide production protects the retina against light stress.

Highlights

  • Light-induced retinal degeneration (LIRD) in albino rats causes apoptotic photoreceptor cell death

  • We found that light stress in the retina increased cellular free ceramides

  • We found that this increased ceramide acts as a mediator for photoreceptor apoptosis, because blocking de novo ceramide biosynthesis by administering FTY720 before light stress effectively blocked ceramide increase and preserved retinal structure and function

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Summary

Introduction

Light-induced retinal degeneration (LIRD) in albino rats causes apoptotic photoreceptor cell death. When we analyzed expression of major genes in rat eye cups at two time points (0 h and 12 h) after light stress, we found that at 0 h after light damage, there were no major changes in the expression of any of the genes tested in the retina; in both retina and eyecup, the expression of almost all of the ceramide metabolic genes, including RPE65 (‫ف‬2-fold), decreased significantly after 12 h, the time point at which most of the photoreceptor cells entered apoptosis (data not shown).

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