INVESTIGADORES
TORBIDONI Ana Vanesa
artículos
Título:
Blockade of Endothelinergic Receptors Prevents Development of Proliferative Vitreoretinopathy in Mice
Autor/es:
MARÍA IRIBARNE, LILIANA OGAWA, VANESA TORBIDONI, CRISTIAN M. DODDS, RICARDO A. DODDS, AND ANGELA M. SUBURO
Revista:
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Editorial:
American Society for Investigative Pathology
Referencias:
Lugar: Rockville Pike Bethesda; Año: 2008 vol. 172 p. 1030 - 1042
ISSN:
0002-9440
Resumen:
Proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR) is characterized by severe glial remodeling. Glial activation and proliferation that occur in brain diseases are modulated by endothelin-1 (ET-1) and its receptor B (ETR-B). Because retinal astrocytes contain ET-1 and express ETR-B, we studied the changes of these molecules in an experimental mouse model of PVR and in human PVR. Both ET-1 and ETR-B immunoreactivities increased in mouse retina after induction of PVR with dispase. Epi- and subretinal outgrowths also displayed these immunoreactivities in both human and experimental PVR. Additionally, myofibroblasts and other membranous cell types showed both ET-1 and ETR-B immunoreactivities. In early stages of experimentally induced PVR, prepro-ET-1 and ETR-B mRNA levels increased in the retina. These mRNA levels also increased after retinal detachment (RD) produced by subretinal injection. Treatment of mice with tezosentan, an antagonist of endothelinergic receptors, reduced the histopathological hallmarks of dispase-induced PVR: retinal folding, epiretinal outgrowth, and gliosis. Our findings in human and in dispase-induced PVR support the involvement of endothelinergic pathways in retinal glial activation and the phenotypic transformations that underlie the growth of membranes in this pathology. Elucidating these pathways further will help to develop pharmacological treatments to prevent PVR. In addition, the presence of ET-1 and ETR-B in human fibrous membranes suggests that similar treatments could be helpful after PVR has been stablished.