Hypoxia tolerance in the Norrin-deficient retina and the chronically hypoxic brain studied at single-cell resolution

Author:

Heng Jacob S.ORCID,Rattner AmirORCID,Stein-O’Brien Genevieve L.,Winer Briana L.,Jones Bryan W.ORCID,Vernon Hilary J.,Goff Loyal A.,Nathans JeremyORCID

Abstract

The mammalian CNS is capable of tolerating chronic hypoxia, but cell type-specific responses to this stress have not been systematically characterized. In the Norrin KO (NdpKO) mouse, a model of familial exudative vitreoretinopathy (FEVR), developmental hypovascularization of the retina produces chronic hypoxia of inner nuclear-layer (INL) neurons and Muller glia. We used single-cell RNA sequencing, untargeted metabolomics, and metabolite labeling from 13C-glucose to compare WT and NdpKO retinas. In NdpKO retinas, we observe gene expression responses consistent with hypoxia in Muller glia and retinal neurons, and we find a metabolic shift that combines reduced flux through the TCA cycle with increased synthesis of serine, glycine, and glutathione. We also used single-cell RNA sequencing to compare the responses of individual cell types in NdpKO retinas with those in the hypoxic cerebral cortex of mice that were housed for 1 week in a reduced oxygen environment (7.5% oxygen). In the hypoxic cerebral cortex, glial transcriptome responses most closely resemble the response of Muller glia in the NdpKO retina. In both retina and brain, vascular endothelial cells activate a previously dormant tip cell gene expression program, which likely underlies the adaptive neoangiogenic response to chronic hypoxia. These analyses of retina and brain transcriptomes at single-cell resolution reveal both shared and cell type-specific changes in gene expression in response to chronic hypoxia, implying both shared and distinct cell type-specific physiologic responses.

Funder

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

HHS | NIH | National Eye Institute

Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation

Mr. David Labovitz

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Genetic Research Core Facility

Thomas J. Kelly and Mary L. Kelly Young Scholar Award

Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative

Johns Hopkins University Catalyst and Synergy Awards

National Science Foundation

Research to Prevent Blindness

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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