Claudin-5 Redistribution Induced by Inflammation Leads to Anti-VEGF-Resistant Diabetic Macular Edema.
Mitsuru ArimaShintaro NakaoMuneo YamaguchiHao FengYuya FujiiKensuke ShibataIori WadaYoshihiro KaizuHamid AhmadiehTatsuro IshibashiAlan W StittKoh-Hei SonodaPublished in: Diabetes (2020)
Approximately 40% of patients with diabetic macular edema (DME) are resistant to anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) therapy (rDME). Here, we demonstrate that significant correlations between inflammatory cytokines and VEGF, as observed in naive DME, are lost in patients with rDME. VEGF overexpression in the mouse retina caused delayed inflammatory cytokine upregulation, monocyte/macrophage infiltration (CD11b+ Ly6C+ CCR2+ cells), macrophage/microglia activation (CD11b+ CD80+ cells), and blood-retinal barrier disruption due to claudin-5 redistribution, which did not recover with VEGF blockade alone. Phosphorylated protein analysis of VEGF-overexpressed retinas revealed rho-associated coiled-coil-containing protein kinase (ROCK) activation. Administration of ripasudil, a selective ROCK inhibitor, attenuated retinal inflammation and claudin-5 redistribution. Ripasudil also contributed to the stability of claudin-5 expression by both transcriptional enhancement and degradation suppression in inflammatory cytokine-stimulated endothelium. Notably, the anti-VEGF agent and the ROCK inhibitor were synergic in suppressing cytokine upregulation, monocyte/macrophage infiltration, macrophage/microglia activation, and claudin-5 redistribution. Furthermore, in vitro analysis confirmed that claudin-5 redistribution depends on ROCK2 but not on ROCK1. This synergistic effect was also confirmed in human rDME cases. Our results suggest that ROCK-mediated claudin-5 redistribution by inflammation is a key mechanism in the anti-VEGF resistance of DME.
Keyphrases
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- endothelial cells
- oxidative stress
- induced apoptosis
- adipose tissue
- cell proliferation
- poor prognosis
- dendritic cells
- signaling pathway
- protein kinase
- cell cycle arrest
- optical coherence tomography
- diabetic retinopathy
- stem cells
- transcription factor
- inflammatory response
- nitric oxide
- gene expression
- neuropathic pain
- cell death
- spinal cord injury
- binding protein
- regulatory t cells
- hiv infected
- heat stress
- cell therapy
- pluripotent stem cells