The genomic response to retinal disease and injury: evidence for endothelin signaling from photoreceptors to glia

A Rattner, J Nathans - Journal of Neuroscience, 2005 - Soc Neuroscience
Journal of Neuroscience, 2005Soc Neuroscience
Regardless of proximal cause, photoreceptor injury or disease almost invariably leads to the
activation of Muller cells, the principal glial cells in the retina. This observation implies the
existence of signaling systems that inform Muller cells of the health status of photoreceptors.
It further suggests that diverse types of photoreceptor damage elicit a limited range of
biochemical responses. Using the mouse retina, we show by microarray, RNA blot, and in
situ hybridization that the genomic responses to both light damage and inherited …
Regardless of proximal cause, photoreceptor injury or disease almost invariably leads to the activation of Muller cells, the principal glial cells in the retina. This observation implies the existence of signaling systems that inform Muller cells of the health status of photoreceptors. It further suggests that diverse types of photoreceptor damage elicit a limited range of biochemical responses. Using the mouse retina, we show by microarray, RNA blot, and in situ hybridization that the genomic responses to both light damage and inherited photoreceptor degeneration involve a relatively small number of genes and that the genes activated by these two insults overlap substantially with one another and with the genes activated by retinal detachment. Among the induced transcripts, those coding for endothelin2 (Edn2) are unusual in that they are localized to photoreceptors and are also highly induced in all of the tested models of photoreceptor disease or injury. Acute light damage also leads to a >10-fold increase in endothelin receptor B (Ednrb) in Muller cells 24 h after injury. These observations suggest that photoreceptor-derived EDN2 functions as a general stress signal, that EDN2 signals to Muller cells by binding to EDNRB, and that Muller cells can increase their sensitivity to EDN2 as part of the injury response.
Soc Neuroscience