Abstract

The diseases affecting the retina or uvea (iris, ciliary body, or choroid) generate changes in the biochemical or protein composition of ocular fluids/tissues due to disruption of blood-retinal barrier. Ocular infections and inflammations are sight-threatening diseases associated with various infectious and non-infectious etiologies. Several etiological entities cause uveitis, a complex intraocular inflammatory disease. These causes of uveitis differ in different populations due to geographical, racial, and socioeconomic variations. While clinical appearance is sufficiently diagnostic in many diseases, some of the uveitic entities manifest nonspecific or atypical clinical presentation. Identification of biomarkers in such diseases is an important aid in their diagnostic armamentarium. Different diseases and their different severity states release varying concentrations of proteins, which can serve as biomarkers. Proteomics is a high throughput technology and a powerful screening tool for serum biomarkers in various diseases that identifies proteins by mass spectrometry and helps to improve the understanding of pathogenesis of a disease. Proteins determine the biological state of a cell. Once identified as biomarkers, they serve as future diagnostic and pharmaceutical targets. With a potential to redirect the diagnosis of idiopathic uveitis, ocular proteomics provide a new insight into the pathophysiology and therapeutics of various ocular inflammatory diseases. Tears, aqueous and vitreous humor represent potential repositories for proteomic biomarkers discovery in uveitis. With an extensive proteomics work done on animal models of uveitis, various types of human uveitis are being subjected to proteome analysis for biomarker discovery in different ocular fluids (vitreous, aqueous, or tears).

Highlights

  • Different diseases and their different severity states release varying concentrations of proteins, which can serve as biomarkers

  • With a potential to redirect the diagnosis of idiopathic uveitis, ocular proteomics provide a new insight into the pathophysiology and therapeutics of various ocular inflammatory diseases

  • Animal models of experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU), a model of non-infectious T-cell mediated autoimmune uveitis, have been used extensively to conduct vitreous proteome studies to explore the immune mechanisms associated with intraocular inflammation

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Summary

Protein Biomarkers in Uveitis

Reviewed by: Krishna Ramachandra Murthy, Vittala International Institute of Ophthalmology, India Yohei Tomita, Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, United States. Several etiological entities cause uveitis, a complex intraocular inflammatory disease. These causes of uveitis differ in different populations due to geographical, racial, and socioeconomic variations. Identification of biomarkers in such diseases is an important aid in their diagnostic armamentarium. Different diseases and their different severity states release varying concentrations of proteins, which can serve as biomarkers. Aqueous and vitreous humor represent potential repositories for proteomic biomarkers discovery in uveitis.

INTRODUCTION
Vitreous Humor
Aqueous Humor
Ciliary Body
Retinal Pigment Epithelium
Experimental Autoimmune Uveitis or EAU
Number of proteins identified
Equine Recurrent Uveitis
Vitreous and Autoimmune Posterior Uveitis
Purified rhodopsin
Retina Lymphocytes
Intermediate Uveitis
ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS
Acute Anterior Uveitis
Human Uveitis Associated With Oral Moxifloxacin Therapy
VKH Disease
Human Autoimmune Uveitis and CRALBP
OCULAR SAMPLING TECHNIQUES FOR PROTEOMICS
Blood Serum
CLINICAL APPLICATIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS IN PROTEOMICS OF UVEITIS
Findings
SUMMARY
Full Text
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