Abstract

Previous studies reported the expression of toll-like receptors (TLRs), merely TLR2 and TLR4, and complement fragments (C3a, C5b9) in vitreoretinal disorders. Other than pathogens, TLRs can recognize endogenous products of tissue remodeling as damage-associated molecular pattern (DAMPs). The aim of this study was to confirm the expression of TLR2 and TLR4 in the fibrocellular membranes and vitreal fluids (soluble TLRs) of patients suffering of epiretinal membranes (ERMs) and assess their association with disease severity, complement fragments and inflammatory profiles. Twenty (n = 20) ERMs and twelve (n = 12) vitreous samples were collected at the time of the vitrectomy. Different severity-staged ERMs were processed for: immunolocalization (IF), transcriptomic (RT-PCR) and proteomics (ELISA, IP/WB, Protein Chip Array) analysis. The investigation of targets included TLR2, TLR4, C3a, C5b9, a few selected inflammatory biomarkers (Eotaxin-2, Rantes, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGFA), Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor receptor (VEGFR2), Interferon-γ (IFNγ), Interleukin (IL1β, IL12p40/p70)) and a restricted panel of matrix enzymes (Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs)/Tissue Inhibitor of Metallo-Proteinases (TIMPs)). A reduced cellularity was observed as function of ERM severity. TLR2, TLR4 and myD88 transcripts/proteins were detected in membranes and decreased upon disease severity. The levels of soluble TLR2 and TLR4, as well as C3a, C5b9, Eotaxin-2, Rantes, VEGFA, VEGFR2, IFNγ, IL1β, IL12p40/p70, MMP7 and TIMP2 levels were changed in vitreal samples. Significant correlations were observed between TLRs and complement fragments and between TLRs and some inflammatory mediators. Our findings pointed at TLR2 and TLR4 over-expression at early stages of ERM formation, suggesting the participation of the local immune response in the severity of disease. These activations at the early-stage of ERM formation suggest a potential persistence of innate immune response in the early phases of fibrocellular membrane formation.

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