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Título
Programmed Cell Death and Autophagy in an in vitro Model of Spontaneous Neuroretinal Degeneration
Autor
Año del Documento
2022
Descripción
Producción Científica
Documento Fuente
Frontiers in Neuroanatomy 2022;16:812487
Resumo
Retinal neurodegenerative diseases are the leading causes of visual impairment and
irreversible blindness worldwide. Although the retinal response to injury remains closely
similar between different retinal neurodegenerative diseases, available therapeutic
alternatives are only palliative, too expensive, or very specific, such as gene therapy.
In that sense, the development of broad-spectrum neuroprotective therapies seems
to be an excellent option. In this regard, it is essential to identify molecular targets
involved in retinal degeneration, such as cell death mechanisms. Apoptosis has been
considered as the primary cell death mechanism during retinal degeneration; however,
recent studies have demonstrated that the only use of anti-apoptotic drugs is not
enough to confer good neuroprotection in terms of cell viability and preservation. For
that reason, the interrelationship that exists between apoptosis and other cell death
mechanisms needs to be characterized deeply to design future therapeutic options that
simultaneously block the main cell death pathways. In that sense, the study aimed
to characterize the programmed cell death (in terms of apoptosis and necroptosis)
and autophagy response and modulation in retinal neurodegenerative diseases, using
an in vitro model of spontaneous retinal neurodegeneration. For that purpose, we
measured the mRNA relative expression through qPCR of a selected pool of genes
involved in apoptosis (BAX, BCL2, CASP3, CASP8, and CASP9), necroptosis (MLKL,
RIPK1, and RIPK3), and autophagy (ATG7, BCLIN1, LC3B, mTOR, and SQSTM1);
besides, the immunoexpression of their encoding proteins (Casp3, MLKL, RIPK1,
LC3B, and p62) were analyzed using immunohistochemistry. Our results showed
an increase of pro-apoptotic and pro-necroptotic related genes and proteins during
in vitro retinal neurodegeneration. Besides, we describe for the first time the modulation between programmed cell death mechanisms and autophagy in an in vitro retinal
neurodegeneration model. This study reinforces the idea that cell death mechanisms
are closely interconnected and provides new information about molecular signaling and
autophagy along the retinal degeneration process.
Revisión por pares
SI
Patrocinador
Spanish Government (PID2019-110709RB-100, RED2018-102417-T, FPU16/04015, PID2020-114585RA-I00, and PID2020- 118860RB-I00), Junta de Castilla y León (VA317P18, Infrared2018-UVA06), Interreg V España Portugal POCTEP (0624_2IQBIONEURO_6_E) and Centro en Red de Medicina Regenerativa y Terapia Celular de Castilla y León
Idioma
eng
Tipo de versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Derechos
openAccess
Aparece en las colecciones
Arquivos deste item
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