Pericytes and the Pathogenesis of Diabetic Retinopathy

Author:

Hammes Hans-Peter1,Lin Jihong1,Renner Oliver2,Shani Moshe3,Lundqvist Andrea4,Betsholtz Christer4,Brownlee Michael5,Deutsch Urban6

Affiliation:

1. Fifth Medical Clinic, Medical Faculty of the University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany

2. Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncológicas, Madrid, Spain

3. Institute of Animal Science, the Volcani Center, Bet Dagan, Israel

4. Department of Medical Biochemistry, Goteborg University, Goteborg, Sweden

5. Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, New York

6. Max-Planck Institute for Vascular Biology, Münster, Germany

Abstract

Pericytes provide vascular stability and control endothelial proliferation. Pericyte loss, microaneurysms, and acellular capillaries are characteristic for the diabetic retina. Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-B is involved in pericyte recruitment, and brain capillaries of mice with a genetic ablation of PDGF-B show pericyte loss and microaneurysms. We investigated the role of capillary coverage with pericytes in early diabetic retinopathy and the contribution to proliferative retinopathy using mice with a single functional allele of PDGF-B (PDGF-B+/− mice). As assessed by quantitative morphometry of retinal digest preparations, pericyte numbers in nondiabetic PDGF-B+/− mice were reduced by 30% compared with wild-type mice, together with a small but significant increase in acellular capillaries. Pericyte numbers were reduced by 40% in diabetic wild-type mice compared with nondiabetic wild-type controls. Pericyte numbers were decreased by 50% in diabetic PDGF-B+/− mice compared with nondiabetic wild-type littermates, and the incidence of acellular capillaries was increased 3.5-fold when compared with nondiabetic PDGF-B+/− mice. To investigate the effect of pericyte loss in the context of ongoing angiogenesis, we subjected mice to hypoxia-induced proliferative retinopathy. As a result, PDGF-B+/− mice developed twice as many new blood vessels as their wild-type littermates. We conclude that retinal capillary coverage with pericytes is crucial for the survival of endothelial cells, particularly under stress conditions such as diabetes. At high vascular endothelial growth factor levels, such as those in the retinopathy of prematurity model, pericyte deficiency leads to reduced inhibition of endothelial proliferation in vivo.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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