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From the Glaucoma Research Laboratory, Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. Forty rats had unilateral injection of either 125I-BDNF (20 animals) or a mixture of 125I-BDNF and 100-fold excess nonradiolabeled BDNF (20 animals). In each group of 20 animals, eyes contralateral to injection had either normal intraocular pressure (IOP; 10 animals) or IOP elevated to 25 mm Hg below the systolic blood pressure of the eye (10 animals). In each group of 20 rats, ipsilateral eyes had IOP set at systolic blood pressure (4 eyes), had optic nerve transection (10 eyes), or had normal IOP (6 eyes). Six hours after injection, animals were killed and tissues were fixed, embedded, and sectioned for autoradiography. Grain counts were performed over retina and optic nerve using automated image analysis.
RESULTS. IOP elevation to 25 mm Hg below systolic blood pressure (perfusion pressure [PP] 25) decreased median retinal nerve fiber layer (NFL) grains by 38% compared with controls (P < 0.001). Competition by cold BDNF reduced NFL grains by 28% (P = 0.013). Considering only the radioactivity representing specific retrograde transport of BDNF, IOP elevation to PP25 reduced transport by 74%, whereas elevation to PP0 (equaling systolic blood pressure) reduced specific transport by 83%.
CONCLUSIONS. BDNF is transported retrogradely from the superior colliculus in adult rats, and this transport is substantially inhibited by acute IOP elevation. Deprivation of BDNF among RGCs may contribute to neuron loss in glaucoma.
| Introduction |
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Candidates for important trophic factors among RGCs now include a variety of growth factors and neurotrophic factors. One such molecule that appears to be of particular importance to RGCs is BDNF. RGCs are produced in excess in fetal life, then pruned to only those properly targeted to central nervous system centers. Target-derived stimulation by trophic factors, including BDNF for RGCs, has been shown to promote neuronal survival.5 6 7 8 9 10 BDNF, in particular, has been shown to increase survival of photoreceptors in inherited retinal degeneration, light toxicity, and experimental retinal detachment.11 12 13 BDNF also retards RGCs and inner retinal neuronal loss after retinal hypoxia and optic nerve transection.14 15 16 BDNF and associated neurotrophins interact with specific transmembrane cell surface receptors that dimerize after binding of the ligand and are incorporated into vesicles for retrograde transport to the cell body.17
Acute and chronic models in the rat have begun to contribute to investigations in glaucoma research.18 19 20 The production of elevated IOP in rats has been shown to lead to RGC death. The relatively lower cost and convenience of the rat for studies of new glaucoma therapies recommends such models by comparison to primate models. In a previous report, we demonstrated that the primary BDNF receptor TrkB is present in optic nerve axons of monkey and rat and that its distribution changes with acute and chronic experimental glaucoma in a manner suggesting transport interruption at the optic nerve head region.21 In a small number of eyes in that study, we measured radioactive BDNF movement after intracranial injection, corroborating the probable functional significance of TrkB obstruction. The present report was designed to study in detail the retrograde transport of BDNF in the adult rat, to differentiate specific axonally transported BDNF from nonspecific movement of BDNF into the retina after intracollicular injection, and to quantify in greater detail the degree of blockade of BDNF movement by experimental IOP elevation.
| Methods |
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In 10 rats each in the hot BDNF and the cold competition groups, the eye contralateral to collicular injection had normal IOP for 6 hours after injection. IOP was monitored (Tonopen XL; Mentor, Norwell, MA) with topical proparacaine eyedrop anesthesia. In 10 additional rats in each group, the contralateral eye was set at IOP equal to 25 mm Hg below the systolic ocular blood pressure. To accomplish this, we placed a blunt 30-gauge needle into the anterior chamber, connected to a variable-height reservoir of saline. Systolic blood pressure was estimated by raising the reservoir until flow in the central retinal artery was shown to cease by indirect ophthalmoscopy. In extensive comparisons, we raised and lowered IOP using the reservoir and anterior chamber needle, while monitoring the femoral artery blood pressure from a cannula connected to a transducer. The ophthalmoscopic estimation of systolic and diastolic blood pressure in the retinal arteries was reproducibly 10 mm Hg below that obtained in the femoral artery of several rats with different blood pressures under anesthesia. Brief rechecks of the systolic retinal artery pressure level were made during the experiment. We estimate that flow to the eye was affected for less than 1 minute by the ophthalmoscopic procedure for each rat. The level of anesthesia was assessed by noting the respiration rate and response to paw stimulation, and supplemental pentobarbital sodium was administered to maintain stable anesthesia. At 6 hours after collicular injection (and IOP elevation in half of the eyes), animals were killed with pentobarbital and the eyes rapidly enucleated.
To investigate potential nonaxonal sources of BDNF movement, four protocols were performed with the eyes ipsilateral to collicular injection. These were: 1) To eliminate any axonal transport contribution, the ipsilateral optic nerve was transected in eight eyes (without suture ligation); 2) to prevent not only axonal transport, but also diffusion through cerebrospinal fluid through cut ends of the nerve sheath, the ipsilateral optic nerve was transected, and the distal optic nerve and sheath were ligated with a 10-0 nylon suture (12 eyes); 3) to prevent axonal transport and to stop entry of BDNF through the vasculature, IOP was elevated in ipsilateral eyes to a level equal to blood pressure (8 eyes); and 4) 12 ipsilateral eyes were maintained at normal IOP as controls. In each of the four groups, half of the animals received only 125I-BDNF (hot BDNF) in their unilateral collicular injection and half were injected collicularly with the mixture of cold and radioactive BDNF (cold competition). Optic nerve transections were performed before collicular injection.
Tissues were fixed by immersion in 2% paraformaldehyde-2% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) and embedded in epoxy resin, and 1-µm-thick sections were placed on glass slides. Sections were used that included the optic nerve head, optic nerve, and nasal and temporal retina. Epoxy sections were dipped in liquid emulsion (NTB-2; Scientific Imaging Systems, Eastman Kodak, Rochester NY). After 2-month exposures, these were developed, and the number of grains per square millimeter was counted with an image analysis instrument (Vidas; Carl Zeiss, Thornwood, NY). In one slide from each eye, retinal counts were taken from six areas of the nerve fiber layer, from two areas of the photoreceptor layer (as background estimates), from the optic nerve head, and from the unmyelinated and myelinated optic nerve. The median values for each retina were calculated and are reported here rather than mean values. This was done because the data from some groups of eyes were not normally distributed and the median value better expressed the group behavior. One observer performed all counting and was masked to the protocol used for the eyes.
| Results |
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We chose to estimate BDNF transport by measuring the grain density over the nerve fiber layer (NFL). Although transport to RGC bodies was also of interest, counting over the layer with RGC bodies added large variations due to the presence of the unlabeled RGC nuclei (Fig. 1) . This was most apparent in comparing counts in the most posterior retina where RGC body density was highest with counts in more peripheral retinal zones. Qualitative examination of the position of autoradiographic grains overlying the tissue showed a consistent pattern. Grains were dense over the retinal NFL and in the cytoplasm of RGCs, but not over their nuclei. The inner plexiform layer had fewer overlying grains than the NFL, and the remainder of the retina had almost none (Fig. 1) . The 36 contralateral eyes had a median of 738 grains/10,000 µm2 over the NFL and 9 grains/10,000 µm2 over photoreceptors. We considered the latter to be an estimate of background radioactivityapproximately 1.3% of the grain density in the area of most interest. There was a dramatic decrease in grain density from the superficial NFL inside the eye into the optic nerve head, where axonal bundles had far lower densities than in the nearby retina (Fig. 2) . For example, for all contralateral eyes (n = 36) the optic nerve head at the level of the choroid had a median grain density of 15 per 10,000 µm2 or 2.1% of that in the nearby NFL.
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Among eyes ipsilateral to the collicular injection that had normal IOP, there was a substantial reduction in grain density when nonradiolabeled BDNF was added to the collicular injection (67% less than the hot BDNF group, P = 0.06; Table 2 ). When ipsilateral eyes with IOP equal to blood pressure were compared with those with normal IOP, the total grain density was reduced, even more than at the lower IOP elevation in contralateral eyes. The data for ipsilateral eyes were calculated to estimate the decrease in specifically transported BDNF, as described for contralateral eyes, by subtracting the grain density with cold BDNF competition from the control retinal density with radioactive BDNF injection alone in both elevated IOP and normal IOP eyes. The percentage of reduction from control at PP0 was 83.0% (Table 2) .
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| Discussion |
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Our previous investigations had suggested that BDNF transport from sites outside the eye into the retina existed and was altered by experimental glaucoma. In both monkey and rat eyes with elevated IOP, we found accumulation of the TrkB receptor protein for BDNF at or behind the optic nerve head in areas that corresponded to zones of vesicle accumulation by electron microscopy. It is known that TrkB receptors are transported retrograde in membrane-bound vesicles in a variety of neuronal systems.7 17 The present experimental results document conclusively that retrograde transport of BDNF occurs from the primary central target area for RGCs in the adult rat, the superior colliculus, and that it is interrupted by moderate IOP elevation. Because BDNF is an important trophic factor in RGC survival in development and in disease states, it is logical that IOP elevation could act to decrease RGC health if central sources of BDNF are important in the adult eye. It is known that RGCs produce their own BDNF, and there are probably other sources of supply for this and other neurotrophins.24 25 However, it is not known whether endogenous BDNF has the same or different effects on RGCs as does BDNF that is retrogradely transported from target cells in a complex with its TrkB receptor. We propose that failure of BDNF supply to RGCs could be a contributing feature of glaucomatous damage. Further contributing evidence for this hypothesis could be supplied if it were determined that RGCs die after experimental deprivation of retrograde BDNF transport by a mechanism other than IOP elevation.
There has been active interest in rodent models of glaucoma in the past 5 years,18 19 20 because of the possibility that new approaches for RGC protection will aid in visual preservation in human glaucoma. To test such neuroprotective methods, we need relatively inexpensive animal models. Chronic IOP elevation in rats has been achieved with at least three techniques, and RGC death has been documented in these models. The rat retina and optic nerve have similarities and differences from those of monkey and human eyes. The sclera is much thinner in rats, and the optic nerve contains only 10% as many fibers. Furthermore, the rat optic nerve head has much less connective tissue in the area corresponding to the lamina cribrosa than does the monkey or the human eye.26 This could be relevant to where and how axons are injured, because the regional structure of the lamina cribrosa appears to provide an explanation for the selective loss of upper and lower optic nerve fibers in glaucoma.27
In the primate, the myelination of the optic nerve begins just behind the lamina cribrosa. In rats, the optic nerve is unmyelinated for the first 1 to 2 mm behind the sclera. In detailed electron microscopic studies of experimental IOP elevation in rat eyes, we found that ultrastructural features compatible with axonal transport obstruction were present in both the unmyelinated and the more central myelinated optic nerve areas.21 These included dilation of axons and accumulation of membrane-bound vesicles. In monkeys, similar features are confined to the lamina cribrosa of the nerve head and are not seen in the myelinated optic nerve.28
The anatomic difference in experimental rat and primate glaucoma was mirrored in our retrograde transport data. The data from the optic nerve showed that high levels of radioactive BDNF accumulated in the myelinated optic nerve, but the levels in the nerve head and unmyelinated segment were below control density. This suggests that the blockade in the rat eye is nearer to the myelin line (2 mm behind the eye). In monkeys with acute experimental glaucoma, retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase was interrupted within the lamina cribrosa.3 In our opinion, this difference does not invalidate the use of rats for studies of the effects of experimentally elevated IOP. However, the interspecies differences make it likely that some aspects of glaucomatous damage differ in rats and primates.
We found that radiolabeled BDNF that was presented unilaterally to the rat superior colliculus arrived at the retina by both specific axonal transport and nonaxonal transport avenues. The specificity of transport was shown by the decrease in retinal and optic nerve grain density with competition for available receptor transport by an excess of nonlabeled BDNF. In previous experiments, we found that this competitive inhibition was specific for BDNF and was not present with excess unlabeled nerve growth factor coinjection. In addition, there were high levels of radioactivity in the NFL and surrounding RGCs and almost none in the remainder of the retina. This speaks against blood-borne movement of BDNF or simple diffusion from outside the eye. Yet, we found measurable radioactivity even in eyes with transected optic nerves. When this was observed in a previous experiment, we suspected that high levels of radioactive BDNF could be present in the ipsilateral optic nerve from direct axonal transport, from vascular transport, or from diffusion through the cerebrospinal fluid from the injection site. After transection alone, material might hypothetically pass across the transection gap, attaining the retina by further diffusion or by continued transport in axons on the side of the transection attached to the eye. This speculation appears to be confirmed by the dramatic decrease in nontransported BDNF caused by suture ligation of the transected nerve stump.
The pattern of high levels of BDNF in the retinal NFL compared with the optic nerve suggests that transport brings the neurotrophin rapidly to the eye with little attrition or local slowdown along the nerve. Once in the retina, high levels of BDNF were present in the NFL and the RGC layer. It is not possible with the methods used here to determine whether the BDNF that arrived at the RGC layer remained within RGC bodies alone. It is possible that some label may have been present within other retinal neurons or glia.29 Recent research suggests that alterations in BDNF may be important in experimental glaucoma30 and that other neurotrophins may be important to survival of RGCs under stress. These include ciliary bodyderived neurotrophic factor (CNTF).31
| Footnotes |
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Submitted for publication March 28, 2000; revised June 13, 2000; accepted July 5, 2000.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
Corresponding author: Harry A. Quigley, Wilmer 120, Johns Hopkins Hospital, 600 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD, 21287. hquigley{at}jhmi.edu
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