Understanding eye diseases is tricky enough. Knowing what causes them at the molecular level is even more confounding.
To understand eye diseases better, University of Iowa (UI) researchers have created the most detailed
map to date of a region of the human eye long associated with blinding
diseases, such as age-related macular degeneration. The high-resolution
molecular map catalogs thousands of proteins in the choroid, which
supplies blood and oxygen to the outer retina, itself critical in
vision. By seeing differences in the abundance of proteins in different
areas of the choroid, the researchers can begin to figure out which
proteins may be the critical actors in vision loss and eye disease.
What vision specialists know is many eye diseases, including
age-related macular degeneration (AMD), are caused by inflammation that
damages the choroid and the accompanying cellular network known as the
retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Yet they’ve been vexed by the anatomy:
Why does it seem that some areas of the choroid-RPE are more
susceptible to disease than others, and what is happening at the
molecular level? The researchers set about to answer that question with
nondiseased eye tissue donated by three deceased older individuals
through the Iowa Lions Eye Bank. From there, Dr Vinit Mahajan, Assistant Professor in Ophthalmology at the university, and Dr Jessica Skeie, a
post-doctoral researcher in ophthalmology, created a map that
catalogs more than 4,000 unique proteins in each of the three areas of
the choroid-RPE: the fovea, macula, and the periphery.
With this map, researchers can see which proteins
are more abundant in certain areas, and also answer the question of why it happens. One such example is a
protein known as CFH, which helps prevent a molecular cascade that can
lead to AMD, much like a levee can keep flooding waters at bay. The UI
researchers learned, though the map, that CFH is most abundant in the
fovea. That helps, because now they know to monitor CFH abundance there;
fewer numbers of the protein could mean increased risk for AMD, for
instance.
Previous studies have compared the abundance of single proteins in
the fovea, macula, and periphery. The UI choroid-RPE map corroborates
findings from these studies, while also opening a whole, new avenue of
research into thousands of proteins that may be involved in vision loss.
The work was funded by the Bright Focus Foundation, a nonprofit
organization whose mission is to eradicate brain and eye diseases,
including Alzheimer's disease, macular degeneration, and glaucoma.
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