Resistance to retinopathy development in obese, diabetic and hypertensive ZSF1 rats: an exciting model to identify protective genes

Vincenza Caolo*, Quentin Roblain, Julie Lecomte, Paolo Carai, Linsey Peters, Ilona Cuijpers, Emma Louise Robinson, Kasper Derks, Jurgen Sergeys, Agnes Noel, Elizabeth A. V. Jones, Lieve Moons, Stephane Heymans

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is one of the major complications of diabetes, which eventually leads to blindness. Up to date, no animal model has yet shown all the co-morbidities often observed in DR patients. Here, we investigated whether obese 42 weeks old ZSF1 rat, which spontaneously develops diabetes, hypertension and obesity, would be a suitable model to study DR. Although arteriolar tortuosity increased in retinas from obese as compared to lean (hypertensive only) ZSF1 rats, vascular density pericyte coverage, microglia number, vascular morphology and retinal thickness were not affected by diabetes. These results show that, despite high glucose levels, obese ZSF1 rats did not develop DR. Such observations prompted us to investigate whether the expression of genes, possibly able to contain DR development, was affected. Accordingly, mRNA sequencing analysis showed that genes (i.e. Npy and crystallins), known to have a protective role, were upregulated in retinas from obese ZSF1 rats. Lack of retina damage, despite obesity, hypertension and diabetes, makes the 42 weeks of age ZSF1 rats a suitable animal model to identify genes with a protective function in DR. Further characterisation of the identified genes and downstream pathways could provide more therapeutic targets for the treat DR.
Original languageEnglish
Article number11922
Number of pages11
JournalScientific Reports
Volume8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Aug 2018

Keywords

  • OXYGEN-INDUCED RETINOPATHY
  • NEUROPEPTIDE-Y RECEPTORS
  • RETINAL NEOVASCULARIZATION
  • ENDOTHELIAL-CELLS
  • GAMMA-CRYSTALLIN
  • VASCULAR LEAKAGE
  • ALPHA-CRYSTALLIN
  • BETA-CRYSTALLIN
  • B-CRYSTALLIN
  • MOUSE MODEL

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