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Neurite Mistargeting and Inverse Order of Intraretinal Vascular Plexus Formation Precede Subretinal Vascularization in Vldlr Mutant Mice. | LitMetric

Neurite Mistargeting and Inverse Order of Intraretinal Vascular Plexus Formation Precede Subretinal Vascularization in Vldlr Mutant Mice.

PLoS One

Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, 80309, United States of America.

Published: May 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • In the retina, blood vessels are crucial for supporting high metabolic demands, but excessive growth can lead to vision problems and blindness.
  • Subretinal vascularization (SRV) is a type of pathological blood vessel growth, observed in specific retinal diseases, arising from existing retinal blood vessels.
  • A study using Vldl-receptor (Vldlr) gene-disrupted mice indicates that SRV is linked to misdirected horizontal cell neurites and abnormal vascular development, but these misdirected neurites are not necessary for the formation of vascular lesions.

Article Abstract

In the retina blood vessels are required to support a high metabolic rate, however, uncontrolled vascular growth can lead to impaired vision and blindness. Subretinal vascularization (SRV), one type of pathological vessel growth, occurs in retinal angiomatous proliferation and proliferative macular telangiectasia. In these diseases SRV originates from blood vessels within the retina. We use mice with a targeted disruption in the Vldl-receptor (Vldlr) gene as a model to study SRV with retinal origin. We find that Vldlr mRNA is strongly expressed in the neuroretina, and we observe both vascular and neuronal phenotypes in Vldlr-/- mice. Unexpectedly, horizontal cell (HC) neurites are mistargeted prior to SRV in this model, and the majority of vascular lesions are associated with mistargeted neurites. In Foxn4-/- mice, which lack HCs and display reduced amacrine cell (AC) numbers, we find severe defects in intraretinal capillary development. However, SRV is not suppressed in Foxn4-/-;Vldlr-/- mice, which reveals that mistargeted HC neurites are not required for vascular lesion formation. In the absence of VLDLR, the intraretinal capillary plexuses form in an inverse order compared to normal development, and subsequent to this early defect, vascular proliferation is increased. We conclude that SRV in the Vldlr-/- model is associated with mistargeted neurites and that SRV is preceded by altered retinal vascular development.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4503745PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0132013PLOS

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