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Emerging Role of Exosomes in Retinal Diseases

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.643680

Keywords

exosome; extracellular vesicles; retina; stem cell; miRNAs

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81870669, 81900875, 12027808]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20171503, BK20191059]
  3. Key Project of Research and Development Plan [2017YFA0104101]

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Retinal diseases, leading causes of vision loss and blindness, involve complex pathogeneses such as angiogenesis, inflammation, immune regulation, fibrous proliferation, and neurodegeneration. Exosomes, as important mediators of cell communication, carry a variety of biomolecules and have the potential to be therapeutically effective in treating retinal diseases.
Retinal diseases, the leading causes of vison loss and blindness, are associated with complicated pathogeneses such as angiogenesis, inflammation, immune regulation, fibrous proliferation, and neurodegeneration. The retina is a complex tissue, where the various resident cell types communicate between themselves and with cells from the blood and immune systems. Exosomes, which are bilayer membrane vesicles with diameters of 30-150 nm, carry a variety of proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids, and participate in cell-to-cell communication. Recently, the roles of exosomes in pathophysiological process and their therapeutic potential have been emerging. Here, we critically review the roles of exosomes as possible intracellular mediators and discuss the possibility of using exosomes as therapeutic agents in retinal diseases.

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