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The Mechanism of Diabetic Retinopathy Pathogenesis Unifying Key Lipid Regulators, Sirtuin 1 and Liver X Receptor.

Citation
Hammer, S. S., et al. “The Mechanism Of Diabetic Retinopathy Pathogenesis Unifying Key Lipid Regulators, Sirtuin 1 And Liver X Receptor.”. Ebiomedicine, pp. 181-190.
Center University of Michigan
Author Sandra S Hammer, Eleni Beli, Nermin Kady, Qi Wang, Kiana Wood, Todd A Lydic, Goldis Malek, Daniel R Saban, Xiaoxin X Wang, Sugata Hazra, Moshe Levi, Julia Busik V, Maria B Grant
Keywords bone marrow, Cholesterol efflux, Cholesterol metabolism, Circulating angiogenic cells, Diabetic retinopathy, Dyslipidemia, glucose, Liver X receptor, Retinal endothelial cells, Retinal inflammation, Reverse cholesterol transport, SIRT1, Tumor necrosis factor alpha
Abstract

Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a complication secondary to diabetes and is the number one cause of blindness among working age individuals worldwide. Despite recent therapeutic breakthroughs using pharmacotherapy, a cure for DR has yet to be realized. Several clinical trials have highlighted the vital role dyslipidemia plays in the progression of DR. Additionally, it has recently been shown that activation of Liver X receptor (LXRα/LXRβ) prevents DR in diabetic animal models. LXRs are nuclear receptors that play key roles in regulating cholesterol metabolism, fatty acid metabolism and inflammation. In this manuscript, we show insight into DR pathogenesis by demonstrating an innovative signaling axis that unifies key metabolic regulators, Sirtuin 1 and LXR, in modulating retinal cholesterol metabolism and inflammation in the diabetic retina. Expression of both regulators, Sirtuin 1 and LXR, are significantly decreased in diabetic human retinal samples and in a type 2 diabetic animal model. Additionally, activation of LXR restores reverse cholesterol transport, prevents inflammation, reduces pro-inflammatory macrophages activity and prevents the formation of diabetes-induced acellular capillaries. Taken together, the work presented in this manuscript highlights the important role lipid dysregulation plays in DR progression and offers a novel potential therapeutic target for the treatment of DR.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
EBioMedicine
Volume
22
Number of Pages
181-190
Date Published
08/2017
ISSN Number
2352-3964
DOI
10.1016/j.ebiom.2017.07.008
Alternate Journal
EBioMedicine
PMID
28774737
PMCID
PMC5552206
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