4.5 Review

Harnessing the Neuroprotective Behaviors of Muller Glia for Retinal Repair

Journal

FRONTIERS IN BIOSCIENCE-LANDMARK
Volume 27, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IMR PRESS
DOI: 10.31083/j.fbl2706169

Keywords

retina; gliosis; Muller glia; neuroprotection; in vitro; retinopathies; anti-VEGF; bioengineering

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R21 EY031439]
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF) [EEC-19-50509]

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Progressive and irreversible vision loss in mature and aging adults creates a global burden, and the neuroprotective abilities of retinal glial cells (Muller glia) have not been fully explored and utilized for vision restoration.
Progressive and irreversible vision loss in mature and aging adults creates a health and economic burden, worldwide. Despite the advancements of many contemporary therapies to restore vision, few approaches have considered the innate benefits of gliosis, the endogenous processes of retinal repair that precede vision loss. Retinal gliosis is fundamentally driven by Muller glia (MG) and is characterized by three primary cellular mechanisms: hypertrophy, proliferation, and migration. In early stages of gliosis, these processes have neuroprotective potential to halt the progression of disease and encourage synaptic activity among neurons. Later stages, however, can lead to glial scarring, which is a hallmark of disease progression and blindness. As a result, the neuroprotective abilities of MG have remained incompletely explored and poorly integrated into current treatment regimens. Bioengineering studies of the intrinsic behaviors of MG hold promise to exploit glial reparative ability, while repressing neuro-disruptive MG responses. In particular, recent in vitro systems have become primary models to analyze individual gliotic processes and provide a stepping stone for in vivo strategies. This review highlights recent studies of MG gliosis seeking to harness MG neuroprotective ability for regeneration using contemporary biotechnologies. We emphasize the importance of studying gliosis as a reparative mechanism, rather than disregarding it as an unfortunate clinical prognosis in diseased retina.

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