Back to Search Start Over

Impaired autophagy in macrophages promotes inflammatory eye disease

Authors :
Abdelaziz Gdoura
Herbert W. Virgin
Shizuo Akira
Tatsuya Saitoh
Andrea Santeford
P. Kumar Rao
Sonya Bamba
Thomas A. Ferguson
Sunmin Park
Jun-Lin Guan
Rajendra S. Apte
Luke A Wiley
Rei Nakamura
Ramnik J. Xavier
Source :
Autophagy. 12(10)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Autophagy is critical for maintaining cellular homeostasis. Organs such as the eye and brain are immunologically privileged. Here, we demonstrate that autophagy is essential for maintaining ocular immune privilege. Deletion of multiple autophagy genes in macrophages leads to an inflammation-mediated eye disease called uveitis that can cause blindness. Loss of autophagy activates inflammasome-mediated IL1B secretion that increases disease severity. Inhibition of caspase activity by gene deletion or pharmacological means completely reverses the disease phenotype. Of interest, experimental uveitis was also increased in a model of Crohn disease, a systemic autoimmune disease in which patients often develop uveitis, offering a potential mechanistic link between macrophage autophagy and systemic disease. These findings directly implicate the homeostatic process of autophagy in blinding eye disease and identify novel pathways for therapeutic intervention in uveitis.

Details

ISSN :
15548635
Volume :
12
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Autophagy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....314fdc11661a8ac64f681e0e094aa813