Affiliation:
1. nstitute of Cytology and Genetics, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Abstract
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a multifactorial neurodegenerative disease that is
becoming the leading cause of irreversible vision loss in people over 55 years of age. The
development of the wet form of AMD is associated with impaired permeability of the blood-
retinal barrier (BRB). It was believed that the BRB does not change in the dry form of the
disease, but recently it was shown that dysfunction of the BRB may also contribute to its
development; however, information about the state of the BRB at different stages of AMD,
especially preclinical ones, is limited. The purpose of this study was to assess the possible
contribution of changes in BRB permeability to the development of signs of AMD in OXYS rats,
a model of the dry form of the disease. During the period when clinical signs of AMD in OXYS
rats are absent (age 20 days), during their manifestation (~5 months) and progression (at 12 and
18 months), the permeability of the BRB for Evans blue dye and the retinal contents of the tight
junction proteins occludin, claudin-5, and zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1) were assessed. Wistar rats
of the same age served as controls. In OXYS rats, a decrease in the permeability of the BRB was
detected, which may result in a violation of the trophic supply of the retina, as well as an increase
in the level of occludin during the progression of signs of AMD. ZO-1 level decreased with age,
but no interstrain differences were detected. Analysis of retinal transcriptomes (RNA-seq data)
showed that in rats of both strains changes in the expression of genes included (according to
KEGG) in the category of tight junctions are maximum in the period from 20 days to 3 months.
In OXYS rats, the mRNA levels of the Dlg1, Cd1d1, Map3k5 and Arhgef2 genes at the age of
3 months and the Crb3, F11r, Cgn, Cd1d1 and Rap2c genes the age of 18 months are different
compared to Wistar rats. Such changes in gene expression in the retina of OXYS rats as AMD
signs develop indicate the activation of compensatory mechanisms.
Funder
Russian Science Foundation