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A connectomics approach to understanding a retinal disease.

Charles L ZuckerPaul S BernsteinRichard L SchalekJeff W LichtmanJohn E Dowling
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2020)
Macular telangiectasia type 2 (MacTel), a late-onset macular degeneration, has been linked to a loss in the retina of Müller glial cells and the amino acid serine, synthesized by the Müller cells. The disease is confined mainly to a central retinal region called the MacTel zone. We have used electron microscopic connectomics techniques, optimized for disease analysis, to study the retina from a 48-y-old woman suffering from MacTel. The major observations made were specific changes in mitochondrial structure within and outside the MacTel zone that were present in all retinal cell types. We also identified an abrupt boundary of the MacTel zone that coincides with the loss of Müller cells and macular pigment. Since Müller cells synthesize retinal serine, we propose that a deficiency of serine, required for mitochondrial maintenance, causes mitochondrial changes that underlie MacTel development.
Keyphrases
  • diabetic retinopathy
  • optical coherence tomography
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • late onset
  • optic nerve
  • amino acid
  • signaling pathway
  • early onset
  • single cell
  • spinal cord
  • protein kinase
  • replacement therapy