4.6 Review

Immune Responses in the Glaucomatous Retina: Regulation and Dynamics

Journal

CELLS
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10081973

Keywords

glaucoma; innate immune response; dysfunction; inflammasome; adaptive immune response

Categories

Funding

  1. United States (U.S.) Department of Veterans Affairs, Research, and Development Service [I50 RX003002, 1 I01 RX002860-01]
  2. NIH [EY032261]
  3. Department of Defense [VR200079]
  4. Russian Science Foundation [N17-15-01433]
  5. Research to Prevent Blindness
  6. Russian Science Foundation [20-15-18017] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Glaucoma is a multifactorial disease that causes progressive vision loss by affecting retinal ganglion cells. Early events in the disease include oxidative, metabolic, or mechanical stress on RGC, leading to inflammatory responses and potential loss of RGC.
Glaucoma is a multifactorial disease resulting in progressive vision loss due to retinal ganglion cell (RGC) dysfunction and death. Early events in the pathobiology of the disease include oxidative, metabolic, or mechanical stress that acts upon RGC, causing these to rapidly release danger signals, including extracellular ATP, resulting in micro- and macroglial activation and neuroinflammation. Danger signaling also leads to the formation of inflammasomes in the retina that enable maturation of proinflammatory cytokines such IL-1 beta and IL-18. Chronic neuroinflammation can have directly damaging effects on RGC, but it also creates a proinflammatory environment and compromises the immune privilege of the retina. In particular, continuous synthesis of proinflammatory mediators such as TNF alpha, IL-1 beta, and anaphylatoxins weakens the blood-retina barrier and recruits or activates T-cells. Recent data have demonstrated that adaptive immune responses strongly exacerbate RGC loss in animal models of the disease as T-cells appear to target heat shock proteins displayed on the surface of stressed RGC to cause their apoptotic death. It is possible that dysregulation of these immune responses contributes to the continued loss of RGC in some patients.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available