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1.
Int J Mol Sci ; 24(18)2023 Sep 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37762510

ABSTRACT

Loss of photoreceptors in retinal degenerative diseases also impacts the inner retina: bipolar cell dendrites retract, neurons rewire, and protein expression changes. ON-bipolar cells (OBCs) represent an attractive target for optogenetic vision restoration. However, the above-described maladaptations may negatively impact the quality of restored vision. To investigate this question, we employed human post-mortem retinas and transgenic rd1_Opto-mGluR6 mice expressing the optogenetic construct Opto-mGluR6 in OBCs and carrying the retinal degeneration rd1 mutation. We found significant changes in delayed rectifier potassium channel expression in OBCs of degenerative retinas. In particular, we found an increase in Kv1.3 expression already in early stages of degeneration. Immunohistochemistry localized Kv1.3 channels specifically to OBC axons. In whole-cell patch-clamp experiments, OBCs in the degenerated murine retina were less responsive, which could be reversed by application of the specific Kv1.3 antagonist Psora-4. Notably, Kv1.3 block significantly increased the amplitude and kinetics of Opto-mGluR6-mediated light responses in OBCs of the blind retina and increased the signal-to-noise ratio of light-triggered responses in retinal ganglion cells. We propose that reduction in Kv1.3 activity in the degenerated retina, either by pharmacological block or by KCNA3 gene silencing, could improve the quality of restored vision.

2.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci ; 64(11): 29, 2023 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37610761

ABSTRACT

Purpose: The isolated ex vivo retina is the standard model in retinal physiology and neuroscience. During isolation, the retina is peeled from the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), which plays a key role in the visual cycle. Here we introduce the choroid-attached bovine retina as an in vivo-like model for retinal physiology. We find that-in the bovine eye-the choroid and retina can be peeled from the sclera as a single thin sheet. Importantly, the retina remains tightly associated with the RPE, which is sandwiched between the retina and the choroid. Furthermore, bovine tissue is readily available and cheap, and there are no ethical concerns related to the use of animals solely for research purposes. Methods: We combine multi-electrode array and single-cell patch-clamp recordings to characterize light responses in the choroid-attached bovine ex vivo retina. Results: We demonstrate robust and consistent light responses in choroid-attached preparations. Importantly, light responses adapt to different levels of background illumination and rapidly recover from photobleaching. The choroid-attached retina is also thin enough to permit targeted electrophysiological recording from individual retinal neurons using standard differential interference contrast microscopy. We also characterize light responses and membrane properties of bovine retinal ganglion cells and compare data obtained from bovine and murine retinas. Conclusions: The choroid-attached retinal model retains the advantages of the isolated retina but with an intact visual cycle and represents a useful tool to elucidate retinal physiology.


Subject(s)
Retina , Retinal Neurons , Cattle , Animals , Mice , Retinal Pigment Epithelium , Retinal Ganglion Cells , Choroid
3.
Cells ; 11(15)2022 08 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35954276

ABSTRACT

Hearing loss affects over 460 million people worldwide and is a major socioeconomic burden. Both genetic and environmental factors (i.e., noise overexposure, ototoxic drug treatment and ageing), promote the irreversible degeneration of cochlear hair cells and associated auditory neurons, leading to sensorineural hearing loss. In contrast to birds, fish and amphibians, the mammalian inner ear is virtually unable to regenerate due to the limited stemness of auditory progenitors, and no causal treatment is able to prevent or reverse hearing loss. As of today, a main limitation for the development of otoprotective or otoregenerative therapies is the lack of efficient preclinical models compatible with high-throughput screening of drug candidates. Currently, the research field mainly relies on primary organotypic inner ear cultures, resulting in high variability, low throughput, high associated costs and ethical concerns. We previously identified and characterized the phoenix auditory neuroprogenitors (ANPGs) as highly proliferative progenitor cells isolated from the A/J mouse cochlea. In the present study, we aim at identifying the signaling pathways responsible for the intrinsic high stemness of phoenix ANPGs. A transcriptomic comparison of traditionally low-stemness ANPGs, isolated from C57Bl/6 and A/J mice at early passages, and high-stemness phoenix ANPGs was performed, allowing the identification of several differentially expressed pathways. Based on differentially regulated pathways, we developed a reprogramming protocol to induce high stemness in presenescent ANPGs (i.e., from C57Bl6 mouse). The pharmacological combination of the WNT agonist (CHIR99021) and TGFß/Smad inhibitors (LDN193189 and SB431542) resulted in a dramatic increase in presenescent neurosphere growth, and the possibility to expand ANPGs is virtually limitless. As with the phoenix ANPGs, stemness-induced ANPGs could be frozen and thawed, enabling distribution to other laboratories. Importantly, even after 20 passages, stemness-induced ANPGs retained their ability to differentiate into electrophysiologically mature type I auditory neurons. Both stemness-induced and phoenix ANPGs resolve a main bottleneck in the field, allowing efficient, high-throughput, low-cost and 3R-compatible in vitro screening of otoprotective and otoregenerative drug candidates. This study may also add new perspectives to the field of inner ear regeneration.


Subject(s)
Hearing Loss , Smad Proteins/metabolism , Transforming Growth Factor beta , Wnt Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Cochlea/metabolism , Hair Cells, Auditory , Hearing Loss/metabolism , Humans , Mammals , Mice , Neurons , Transforming Growth Factor beta/metabolism
4.
Front Cell Neurosci ; 15: 809531, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35095426

ABSTRACT

Bipolar cells have become successful targets for optogenetic gene therapies that restore vision after photoreceptor degeneration. However, degeneration was shown to cause changes in neuronal connectivity and protein expression, which may impact the quality of synthetically restored signaling. Further, the expression of an optogenetic protein may alter passive membrane properties of bipolar cells affecting signal propagation. We here investigated the passive membrane properties of rod bipolar cells in three different systems, the healthy retina, the degenerated retina, and the degenerated retina expressing the optogenetic actuator Opto-mGluR6. We found that, based on the shape of their current-voltage relations, rod bipolar cells in healthy and degenerated retinas form two clear functional groups (type 1 and type 2 cells). Depolarizing the membrane potential changed recorded current-voltage curves from type 1 to type 2, confirming a single cell identity with two functional states. Expression of Opto-mGluR6 did not alter the passive properties of the rod bipolar cell. With progressing degeneration, dominant outward rectifying currents recorded in type 2 rod bipolar cells decreased significantly. We demonstrate that this is caused by a downregulation of BK channel expression in the degenerated retina. Since this BK conductance will normally recover the membrane potential after RBCs are excited by open TRPM1 channels, a loss in BK will decrease high-pass filtering at the rod bipolar cell level. A better understanding of the changes of bipolar cell physiology during retinal degeneration may pave the way to optimize future treatment strategies of blindness.

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