Abstract

Retinal Müller glial cells (MGs) are among the first to demonstrate metabolic changes during retinal disease and are a potential source of regenerative cells. In response to a harmful stimulus, they can dedifferentiate acquiring neural stem cells properties, proliferate and migrate to the damaged retinal layer and differentiate into lost neurons. However, it is not yet known how this reprogramming process is regulated in mammals. Since glucose and oxygen are important regulatory elements that may help directing stem cell fate, we aimed to study the effect of glucose variations and oxidative stress in Müller cells reprogramming capacity and analyze the participation the histone deacetylase SIRT6, as an epigenetic modulator of this process. We found that the combination of high glucose and oxidative stress induced a decrease in the levels of the marker glutamine synthetase, and an increase in the migration capacity of the cells suggesting that these experimental conditions could induce some degree of dedifferentiation and favor the migration ability. High glucose induced an increase in the levels of the pluripotent factor SOX9 and a decrease in SIRT6 levels accompanied by the increase in the acetylation levels of H3K9. Inhibiting SIRT6 expression by siRNA rendered an increase in SOX9 levels. We also determined SOX9 levels in retinas from mice with a conditional deletion of SIRT6 in the CNS. To further understand the mechanisms that regulate MGs response under metabolic impaired conditions, we evaluated the gene expression profile and performed Gene Ontology enrichment analysis of Müller cells from a murine model of Diabetes. We found several differentially expressed genes and observed that the transcriptomic change involved the enrichment of genes associated with glucose metabolism, cell migration, development and pluripotency. We found that many functional categories affected in cells of diabetic animals were directly related to SIRT6 function. Transcription factors enrichment analysis allowed us to predict several factors, including SOX9, that may be involved in the modulation of the differential expression program observed in diabetic MGs. Our results underline the heterogeneity of Müller cells response and the challenge that the study of metabolic impairment in vivo represents.

Highlights

  • IntroductionDisease or injury of the retina leads to irreparable vision loss. some teleost fish mount a regenerative response to retinal injury that is capable of restoring lost sight (Lindsey and Powers, 2007; Sherpa et al, 2008)

  • In mammals, disease or injury of the retina leads to irreparable vision loss

  • In this work we aimed to study the effect of glucose variations and oxidative stress in Müller cells’ reprogramming capacity and analyze the participation of SIRT6 as a potential epigenetic modulator of this process

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Summary

Introduction

Disease or injury of the retina leads to irreparable vision loss. some teleost fish mount a regenerative response to retinal injury that is capable of restoring lost sight (Lindsey and Powers, 2007; Sherpa et al, 2008). MGs generally respond to injury by reactive gliosis accompanied by hypertrophy, but they rarely re-enter the cell cycle and regenerate new neurons (Bringmann et al, 2009; Burda and Sofroniew, 2014). These data suggest that the ability of MGs to dedifferentiate in response to retinal injury would be a crucial difference between the regenerative responses of fish and mammals (Ramachandran et al, 2010). It is not yet known how to unlock the neurogenic potential of the mammalian MGs

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