[HTML][HTML] Abundant lipid and protein components of drusen

L Wang, ME Clark, DK Crossman, K Kojima… - PloS one, 2010 - journals.plos.org
L Wang, ME Clark, DK Crossman, K Kojima, JD Messinger, JA Mobley, CA Curcio
PloS one, 2010journals.plos.org
Background Drusen are extracellular lesions characteristic of aging and age-related
maculopathy, a major retinal disease of the elderly. We determined the relative proportions
of lipids and proteins in drusen capped with retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and in RPE
isolated from non-macular regions of 36 human retinas with grossly normal maculas
obtained< 6 hr after death. Methodology/Principal Findings Druse pellets were examined by
light and electron microscopy. Component proteins were extracted using novel methods for …
Background
Drusen are extracellular lesions characteristic of aging and age-related maculopathy, a major retinal disease of the elderly. We determined the relative proportions of lipids and proteins in drusen capped with retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and in RPE isolated from non-macular regions of 36 human retinas with grossly normal maculas obtained <6 hr after death.
Methodology/Principal Findings
Druse pellets were examined by light and electron microscopy. Component proteins were extracted using novel methods for preserved tissues, separated, subjected to tryptic digestion and LC-MS(MS)2 analysis using an ion trap mass spectrometer, and identified with reference to databases. Lipid classes were separated using thin layer chromatography and quantified by densitometry. Major druse components were esterified cholesterol (EC), phosphatidylcholine (PC), and protein (37.5±13.7, 36.9±12.9, and 43.0±11.5 ng/druse, respectively). Lipid-containing particles (median diameter, 77 nm) occupied 37–44% of druse volume. Major proteins include vitronectin, complement component 9, apoE, and clusterin, previously seen in drusen, and ATP synthase subunit β, scavenger receptor B2, and retinol dehydrogenase 5, previously seen in RPE. Drusen and RPE had similar protein profiles, with higher intensities and greater variability in drusen. C8, part of the complement membrane attack complex, was localized in drusen by immunofluorescence.
Conclusions/Significance
At least 40% of druse content is comprised by lipids dominated by EC and PC, 2 components that are potentially accounted for by just one pathway, the secretion of lipoproteins by RPE. Manipulating genes encoding apolipoprotein pathways would be a fruitful approach to producing drusen with high EC content in laboratory animals. Therapies that directly mitigate drusen should prepare for the substantial volume of neutral lipids. The catalog of major druse proteins is nearing completion.
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