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Watching synchronous mitochondrial respiration in the retina and its instability in a mouse model of macular degeneration. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mitochondrial function decreases with age and in specific diseases, making it hard to study in living organisms.
  • Researchers studied mitochondrial function and blood flow in the retinas of aging mice, specifically C57 and CFH models linked to macular degeneration.
  • Findings show that young mice have regular mitochondrial activity linked to blood flow, but as they age, this rhythm becomes irregular and dissipated, indicating that mitochondrial decline could lead to later changes in blood vessels.
  • This innovative approach provides a non-invasive way to identify early retinal diseases and their connection to oxygen levels in real-time.

Article Abstract

Mitochondrial function declines with age and in some diseases, but we have been unable to analyze this in vivo. Here, we optically examine retinal mitochondrial function as well as choroidal oxygenation and hemodynamics in aging C57 and complement factor H (CFH) mice, proposed models of macular degeneration which suffer early retinal mitochondrial decline. In young C57s mitochondrial populations respire in coupled oscillatory behavior in cycles of ~ 8 min, which is phase linked to choroidal oscillatory hemodynamics. In aging C57s, the oscillations are less regular being ~ 14 min and more dissociated from choroidal hemodynamics. The mitochondrial oscillatory cycles are extended in CFH mice being ~ 16 min and are further dissociated from choroidal hemodynamics. Mitochondrial decline occurs before age-related changes to choroidal vasculature, hence, is the likely origin of oscillatory disruption in hemodynamics. This technology offers a non-invasive technique to detect early retinal disease and its relationship to blood oxygenation in vivo and in real time.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7870852PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-82811-2DOI Listing

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