1. HIF-1[alpha] and HIF-2[alpha] redundantly promote retinal neovascularization in patients with ischemic retinal disease
- Author
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Zhang, Jing, Qin, Yaowu, Martinez, Mireya, Flores-Bellver, Miguel, Rodrigues, Murilo, Dinabandhu, Aumreetam, Cao, Xuan, Deshpande, Monika, Qin, Yu, Aparicio-Domingo, Silvia, Rui, Yuan, Tzeng, Stephany Y., Salman, Shaima, Yuan, Jin, Scott, Adrienne W., Green, Jordan J., Canto-Soler, M. Valeria, Semenza, Gregg L., Montaner, Silvia, and Sodhi, Akrit
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Sickle cell anemia -- Complications and side effects -- Drug therapy ,Neovascularization -- Genetic aspects -- Health aspects ,Retinal diseases -- Development and progression -- Drug therapy ,Transcription factors -- Health aspects ,Health care industry - Abstract
Therapies targeting VEGF have proven only modestly effective for the treatment of proliferative sickle cell retinopathy (PSR), the leading cause of blindness in patients with sickle cell disease. Here, we shift our attention upstream from the genes that promote retinal neovascularization (NV) to the transcription factors that regulate their expression. We demonstrated increased expression of HIF-1[alpha] and HIF-2[alpha] in the ischemic inner retina of PSR eyes. Although both HIFs participated in promoting VEGF expression by hypoxic retinal Muller cells, HIF-1 alone was sufficient to promote retinal NV in mice, suggesting that therapies targeting only HIF-2 would not be adequate to prevent PSR. Nonetheless, administration of a HIF-2-specific inhibitor currently in clinical trials (PT2385) inhibited NV in the oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR) mouse model. To unravel these discordant observations, we examined the expression of HIFs in OIR mice and demonstrated rapid but transient accumulation of HIF-1[alpha] but delayed and sustained accumulation of HIF- 2[alpha]; simultaneous expression of HIF-1[alpha] and HIF-2[alpha] was not observed. Staggered HIF expression was corroborated in hypoxic adult mouse retinal explants but not in human retinal organoids, suggesting that this phenomenon may be unique to mice. Using pharmacological inhibition or an in vivo nanoparticle-mediated RNAi approach, we demonstrated that inhibiting either HIF was effective for preventing NV in OIR mice. Collectively, these results explain why inhibition of either HIF-1[alpha] or HIF-2[alpha] is equally effective for preventing retinal NV in mice but suggest that therapies targeting both HIFs will be necessary to prevent NV in patients with PSR., Introduction Several multicenter randomized controlled clinical trials have demonstrated the benefit of monthly (or bimonthly) injections with biological molecules directed against the vasoactive mediator VEGF to treat macular edema in [...]
- Published
- 2021
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