生物
疾病
黄斑变性
计算生物学
生物信息学
内科学
眼科
医学
作者
Sonal Dalvi,Michael Roll,Amit Chatterjee,Lal Krishan Kumar,Akshita Bhogavalli,Nathaniel Foley,Cesar Arduino,Whitney Spencer,Cheyenne Reuben-Thomas,Davide Ortolan,Alice Pébay,Kapil Bharti,Bela Anand‐Apte,Ruchira Singh
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.devcel.2024.09.006
摘要
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and related macular dystrophies (MDs) primarily affect the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) in the eye. A hallmark of AMD/MDs that drives later-stage pathologies is drusen. Drusen are sub-RPE lipid-protein-rich extracellular deposits, but how drusen forms and accumulates is not known. We utilized human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived RPE from patients with AMD and three distinct MDs to demonstrate that reduced activity of RPE-secreted matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP2) contributes to drusen in multiple maculopathies in a genotype-agnostic manner by instigating sterile inflammation and impaired lipid homeostasis via damage-associated molecular pattern molecule (DAMP)-mediated activation of receptor for advanced glycation end-products (RAGE) and increased secretory phospholipase 2-IIA (sPLA2-IIA) levels. Therapeutically, RPE-specific MMP2 supplementation, RAGE-antagonistic peptide, and a small molecule inhibitor of sPLA2-IIA ameliorated drusen accumulation in AMD/MD iPSC-RPE. Ultimately, this study defines a causal role of the MMP2-DAMP-RAGE-sPLA2-IIA axis in AMD/MDs.
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