4.6 Article

Oral Delivery of the P2Y12 Receptor Antagonist Ticagrelor Prevents Loss of Photoreceptors in an ABCA4-/- Mouse Model of Retinal Degeneration

Journal

INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE
Volume 60, Issue 8, Pages 3046-3053

Publisher

ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1167/iovs.19-27241

Keywords

drug delivery; retinal dystrophy; protection; ABCA4; lysosome

Categories

Funding

  1. NEI NIH [EY-013434, EY-015537]
  2. Jody Sack Fund
  3. AstraZeneca

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PURPOSE. Accumulation of lysosomal waste is linked to neurodegeneration in multiple diseases, and pharmacologic enhancement of lysosomal activity is hypothesized to reduce pathology. An excessive accumulation of lysosomal-associated lipofuscin waste and an elevated lysosomal pH occur in retinal pigment epithelial cells of the ABCA4(-/-) mouse model of Stargardt's retinal degeneration. As treatment with the P2Y(12) receptor antagonist ticagrelor was previously shown to lower lysosomal pH and lipofuscin-like autofluorescence in these cells, we asked whether oral delivery of ticagrelor also prevented photoreceptor loss. METHODS. Moderate light exposure was used to accelerate photoreceptor loss in albino ABCA4(-/-) mice as compared to BALB/c controls. Ticagrelor (0.1%-0.15%) was added to mouse chow for between 1 and 10 months. Photoreceptor function was determined with electroretinograms, while cell survival was determined using optical coherence tomography and histology. RESULTS. Protection by ticagrelor was demonstrated functionally by using the electroretinogram, as ticagrelor-treated ABCA4(-/-) mice had increased a- and b-waves compared to untreated mice. Mice receiving ticagrelor treatment had a thicker outer nuclear layer, as measured with both optical coherence tomography and histologic sections. Ticagrelor decreased expression of LAMP1, implicating enhanced lysosomal function. No signs of retinal bleeding were observed after prolonged treatment with ticagrelor. CONCLUSIONS. Oral treatment with ticagrelor protected photoreceptors in the ABCA4(-/-) mouse, which is consistent with enhanced lysosomal function. As mouse ticagrelor exposure levels were clinically relevant, the drug may be of benefit in preventing the loss of photoreceptors in Stargardt's disease and other neurodegenerations associated with lysosomal dysfunction.

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