AI Article Synopsis

  • Retinal detachment (RD) can trigger a severe immune response leading to proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR), a major cause of vision loss, primarily influenced by cytokines like IL6.
  • Researchers studied RD in mice, finding that monocytes rapidly migrated to the retina while microglia remained unaffected, and that IL6 signaling was not activated in the retina itself, but rather in the surrounding fluids.
  • Targeting gp130-mediated signaling in monocytes could be a potential therapeutic approach to prevent PVR and enhance retinal healing after RD occurs.

Article Abstract

Background: Retinal detachment (RD) can lead to proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR), a leading cause of intractable vision loss. PVR is associated with a cytokine storm involving common proinflammatory molecules like IL6, but little is known about the source and downstream signaling of IL6 and the consequences for the retina. Here, we investigated the early immune response and resultant cytokine signaling following RD in mice.

Methods: RD was induced in C57BL/6 J and IL6 knockout mice, and the resulting inflammatory response was examined using immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry. Cytokines and signaling proteins of vitreous and retinas were quantified by multiple cytokine arrays and Western blotting. To attempt to block IL6 signaling, a neutralizing antibody of IL6 receptor α (IL6Rα) or IL6 receptor β (gp-130) was injected intravitreally immediately after RD.

Results: Within one day of RD, bone marrow-derived Cd11b + monocytes had extravasated from the vasculature and lined the vitreal surface of the retina, while the microglia, the resident macrophages of the retina, were relatively unperturbed. Cytokine arrays and Western blot analysis revealed that this sterile inflammation did not cause activation of IL6 signaling in the neurosensory retina, but rather only in the vitreous and aqueous humor. Monocyte infiltration was inhibited by blocking gp130, but not by IL6 knockout or IL6Rα blockade.

Conclusions: Together, our results demonstrate that monocytes are the primary immune cell mediating the cytokine storm following RD, and that any resulting retinal damage is unlikely to be a direct result of retinal IL6 signaling, but rather gp130-mediated signaling in the monocytes themselves. These results suggest that RD should be treated immediately, and that gp130-directed therapies may prevent PVR and promote retinal healing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5481880PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12974-017-0886-6DOI Listing

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