4.6 Article

Perspective on AMD Pathobiology: A Bioenergetic Crisis in the RPE

Journal

INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE
Volume 59, Issue 4, Pages AMD41-AMD47

Publisher

ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1167/iovs.18-24289

Keywords

retinal metabolism; retinal pigment epithelium; photoreceptors; mitochondria; human donor tissue

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Eye Institute [RO1 EY026012, RO1 EY028554]
  2. National Institute of Aging [T32-AG029796]
  3. Lindsay Family Foundation
  4. Elaine and Robert Larson Endowed Vision Research Chair
  5. Research to Prevent Blindness

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AMD is the leading cause of blindness in developed countries. The dry form of AMD, also known as atrophic AMD, is characterized by the death of RPE and photoreceptors. Currently, there are no treatments for this form of the disease due in part to our incomplete understanding of the mechanism causing AMD. Strong experimental evidence from studies of human donors with AMD supports the emerging hypothesis that defects in RPE mitochondria drive AMD pathology. These studies, using different experimental methods, have shown disrupted RPE mitochondrial architecture and decreased mitochondrial number and mass, altered content of multiple mitochondrial proteins, increased mitochondrial DNA damage that correlates with disease severity, and defects in bioenergetics for primary RPE cultures from AMD donors. Herein, we discuss a model of metabolic uncoupling that alters bioenergetics in the diseased retina and drives AMD pathology. These data provide the rationale for targeting the mitochondria in the RPE as the most efficacious intervention strategy if administered early, before vision loss and cell death.

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