Abstract

Early detection of such retinal diseases as glaucoma and age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is important to prevent blindness. There have been reports of changes in some components in the tears of glaucoma and AMD patients, suggesting tears' potential usefulness in screening for retinal diseases. We hypothesized that retinal damage might alter gene expression in the lacrimal gland, leading to those changes in tear components. We caused retinal damage in mice by intravitreal injection of N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) or excessive light exposure. Hematoxylin and eosin staining showed no histological changes in the lacrimal glands of animals whose retinas had been damaged. However, RNA sequencing of lacrimal glands on the 3rd day after NMDA injection or light exposure revealed changes in the expression of 491 genes (268 up-regulated; 223 down-regulated) in the NMDA group and 531 genes (311 up-regulated; 220 down-regulated) in the light group. Further gene-set enrichment analysis indicated that both types of retinal damage activated the immune system in the lacrimal glands. This is the first demonstration that retinal damage can alter gene expression in the lacrimal glands, and it might lead to a novel non-invasive screening method for early detection of retinal diseases.

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