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Disrupted cholesterol metabolism promotes age-related photoreceptor neurodegeneration.

Citation
Ban, N., et al. “Disrupted Cholesterol Metabolism Promotes Age-Related Photoreceptor Neurodegeneration.”. Journal Of Lipid Research, pp. 1414-1423.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author Norimitsu Ban, Tae Jun Lee, Abdoulaye Sene, Zhenyu Dong, Andrea Santeford, Jonathan B Lin, Daniel S Ory, Rajendra S Apte
Keywords ATP binding cassette transporter G1, aging, cholesterol/dietary, cholesterol/efflux, eye/retina, neurons
Abstract

Photoreceptors have high intrinsic metabolic demand and are exquisitely sensitive to metabolic perturbation. In addition, they shed a large portion of their outer segment lipid membranes in a circadian manner, increasing the metabolic burden on the outer retina associated with the resynthesis of cell membranes and disposal of the cellular cargo. Here, we demonstrate that deletion of both ABCA1 and ABCG1 in rod photoreceptors leads to age-related accumulation of cholesterol metabolites in the outer retina, photoreceptor dysfunction, degeneration of rod outer segments, and ultimately blindness. A high-fat diet significantly accelerates rod neurodegeneration and vision loss, further highlighting the role of lipid homeostasis in regulating photoreceptor neurodegeneration and vision.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Journal of lipid research
Volume
59
Issue
8
Number of Pages
1414-1423
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1539-7262
DOI
10.1194/jlr.M084442
Alternate Journal
J. Lipid Res.
PMID
29946056
PMCID
PMC6071770
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