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Retinal proteomics of experimental glaucoma model reveal intraocular pressure‐induced mediators of neurodegenerative changes

Authors :
Kanishka Pushpitha
Joel M. Chick
Mojdeh Abbasi
Stuart L. Graham
Vivek Gupta
Liting Deng
Yunqi Wu
Matthew J. McKay
Veer Bala Gupta
Rashi Rajput
Nitin Chitranshi
Mehdi Mirzaei
Paul A. Haynes
Ghasem Hosseini Salekdeh
Source :
Journal of Cellular Biochemistry. 121:4931-4944
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Current evidence suggests that exposure to chronically induced intraocular pressure (IOP) leads to neurodegenerative changes in the inner retina. This study aimed to determine retinal proteomic alterations in a rat model of glaucoma and compared findings with human retinal proteomics changes in glaucoma reported previously. We developed an experimental glaucoma rat model by subjecting the rats to increased IOP (9.3 ± 0.1 vs 20.8 ± 1.6 mm Hg) by weekly microbead injections into the eye (8 weeks). The retinal tissues were harvested from control and glaucomatous eyes and protein expression changes analysed using a multiplexed quantitative proteomics approach (TMT-MS3). Immunofluorescence was performed for selected protein markers for data validation. Our study identified 4304 proteins in the rat retinas. Out of these, 139 proteins were downregulated (≤0.83) while the expression of 109 proteins was upregulated (≥1.2-fold change) under glaucoma conditions (P ≤ .05). Computational analysis revealed reduced expression of proteins associated with glutathione metabolism, mitochondrial dysfunction/oxidative phosphorylation, cytoskeleton, and actin filament organisation, along with increased expression of proteins in coagulation cascade, apoptosis, oxidative stress, and RNA processing. Further functional network analysis highlighted the differential modulation of nuclear receptor signalling, cellular survival, protein synthesis, transport, and cellular assembly pathways. Alterations in crystallin family, glutathione metabolism, and mitochondrial dysfunction associated proteins shared similarities between the animal model of glaucoma and the human disease condition. In contrast, the activation of the classical complement pathway and upregulation of cholesterol transport proteins were exclusive to human glaucoma. These findings provide insights into the neurodegenerative mechanisms that are specifically affected in the retina in response to chronically elevated IOP.

Details

ISSN :
10974644 and 07302312
Volume :
121
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cellular Biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ee03c465a4e4fecf29ebce21c445fc91
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jcb.29822