GDNF Family Ligands Trigger Indirect Neuroprotective Signaling in Retinal Glial Cells

Author:

Hauck Stefanie M.1,Kinkl Norbert1,Deeg Cornelia A.2,Swiatek-de Lange Magdalena1,Schöffmann Stephanie1,Ueffing Marius1

Affiliation:

1. GSF-National Research Center for Environment and Health, Institute of Human Genetics, Neuherberg/Munich, Germany

2. Institute of Animal Physiology, Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany

Abstract

ABSTRACT Apoptotic cell death of photoreceptors is the final event leading to blindness in the heterogeneous group of inherited retinal degenerations. GDNF (glial cell-line-derived neurotrophic factor) was found to rescue photoreceptor function and survival very effectively in an animal model of retinal degeneration (M. Frasson, S. Picaud, T. Leveillard, M. Simonutti, S. Mohand-Said, H. Dreyfus, D. Hicks, and J. Sahel, Investig. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 40: 2724-2734, 1999). However, the cellular mechanism of GDNF action remained unresolved. We show here that in porcine retina, GDNF receptors GFRα-1 and RET are expressed on retinal Mueller glial cells (RMG) but not on photoreceptors. Additionally, RMG express the receptors for the GDNF family members artemin and neurturin (GFRα-2 and GFRα-3). We further investigated GDNF-, artemin-, and neurturin-induced signaling in isolated primary RMG and demonstrate three intracellular cascades, which are activated in vitro: MEK/ERK, stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK), and PKB/AKT pathways with different kinetics in dependence on stimulating GFL. We correlate the findings to intact porcine retina, where GDNF induces phosphorylation of ERK in the perinuclear region of RMG located in the inner nuclear layer. GDNF signaling resulted in transcriptional upregulation of FGF-2, which in turn was found to support photoreceptor survival in an in vitro assay. We provide here a detailed model of GDNF-induced signaling in mammalian retina and propose that the GDNF-induced rescue effect on mutated photoreceptors is an indirect effect mediated by retinal Mueller glial cells.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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