4.4 Article

Primed Mycobacterial Uveitis (PMU) as a Model for Post-Infectious Uveitis

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JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/62925

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  1. National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, United States [K08EY0123998, R01EY030431, R21 EY02939]
  2. UW vision research core grant [P30EY01730]
  3. Research to Prevent Blindness
  4. Sight Research UK
  5. Underwood Trust

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Uveitis encompasses a range of conditions characterized by intraocular inflammation, with etiology typically classified as infectious or autoimmune. The PMU mouse model, utilizing immunization with mycobacterial extract, provides a useful tool for studying chronic ocular inflammation following mTB infection and evaluating new anti-inflammatory therapies.
The term 'uveitis' describes a heterogeneous set of conditions that all feature intraocular inflammation. Broadly, uveitis is defined by etiology: infection or autoimmunity. Infectious uveitis requires treatment with the appropriate antimicrobial agents, while autoimmune uveitis requires treatment with corticosteroids or other immunosuppressive agents. Post-infectious uveitis is a form of chronic uveitis that requires corticosteroids to control immune sequela following the initial infection. Uveitis associated with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection is a well-recognized form of post-infectious uveitis, but the mechanisms of disease are not fully understood. To understand the role mycobacterial antigens and innate ligands play in stimulating chronic ocular inflammation following mTB infection, the model Primed Mycobacterial Uveitis (PMU) was developed for use in mice. This manuscript outlines the methods for generating PMU and monitoring the clinical course of inflammation using color fundus and optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging. PMU is induced by immunization with heat-killed mycobacterial extract followed by intravitreal injection of the same extract into one eye seven days later. Ocular inflammation is monitored longitudinally using in vivo imaging and followed by sample collection for a wide range of assays, including histology, flow cytometry, cytokine analysis, qPCR, or mRNA sequencing. The mouse model of PMU is a useful new tool for studying the ocular responses to mTB, the mechanism of chronic uveitis, and for preclinical effectiveness tests of new anti-inflammatory therapies.

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