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Mineralocorticoid receptor is involved in rat and human ocular chorioretinopathy
Min Zhao, … , Frédéric Jaisser, Francine Behar-Cohen
Min Zhao, … , Frédéric Jaisser, Francine Behar-Cohen
Published June 11, 2012
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2012;122(7):2672-2679. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI61427.
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Research Article Ophthalmology

Mineralocorticoid receptor is involved in rat and human ocular chorioretinopathy

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Abstract

Central serous chorioretinopathy (CSCR) is a vision-threatening eye disease with no validated treatment and unknown pathogeny. In CSCR, dilation and leakage of choroid vessels underneath the retina cause subretinal fluid accumulation and retinal detachment. Because glucocorticoids induce and aggravate CSCR and are known to bind to the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR), CSCR may be related to inappropriate MR activation. Our aim was to assess the effect of MR activation on rat choroidal vasculature and translate the results to CSCR patients. Intravitreous injection of the glucocorticoid corticosterone in rat eyes induced choroidal enlargement. Aldosterone, a specific MR activator, elicited the same effect, producing choroid vessel dilation -and leakage. We identified an underlying mechanism of this effect: aldosterone upregulated the endothelial vasodilatory K channel KCa2.3. Its blockade prevented aldosterone-induced thickening. To translate these findings, we treated 2 patients with chronic nonresolved CSCR with oral eplerenone, a specific MR antagonist, for 5 weeks, and observed impressive and rapid resolution of retinal detachment and choroidal vasodilation as well as improved visual acuity. The benefit was maintained 5 months after eplerenone withdrawal. Our results identify MR signaling as a pathway controlling choroidal vascular bed relaxation and provide a pathogenic link with human CSCR, which suggests that blockade of MR could be used therapeutically to reverse choroid vasculopathy.

Authors

Min Zhao, Isabelle Célérier, Elodie Bousquet, Jean-Claude Jeanny, Laurent Jonet, Michèle Savoldelli, Olivier Offret, Antoine Curan, Nicolette Farman, Frédéric Jaisser, Francine Behar-Cohen

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Figure 6

Kinetics of OCT vertical scans (red arrows) of CSCR Patient 2 before and after eplerenone treatment.

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Kinetics of OCT vertical scans (red arrows) of CSCR Patient 2 before and...
In the right eye, OCT at presentation showed a bubble of serous retinal detachment (white arrows) close to the macula. Color mapping representation of the retinal surface showed red areas illustrating the extent of retinal detachment. Improvement was observed 15 days after beginning eplerenone treatment that remained stable at 3 weeks and 5 months after treatment was discontinued. In the left eye, OCT before treatment showed submacular fluid accumulation and intraretinal cysts (white arrows). Color mapping representation of the retinal surface showed red elevation at the center of the macula resulting from the fluid accumulation below and inside the retina. The retina recovered its normal morphology and structure with total disappearance of fluid 15 days after eplerenone treatment and 3 weeks and 5 months after eplerenone withdrawal. Scale bars: 2 mm (color mapping); 400 μm (OCT).

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