Can lenticular factors improve the posttrauma fate of neurons?Open Access

Stupp T, Thanos S

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

The intraocular lens has recently been recognized as a potential source for neuroprotective and neurite-promoting activities. The lens is ontogenetically and functionally a peculiar intraocular tissue with the unique feature of performing incomplete cellular apoptosis throughout the lifetime. The ectodermally derived epithelial cells permanently divide to produce the nuclei- and organelle-free lens fibre cells that allow for the optical transparency. The underlying extremely specific physical, biochemical, metabolic and structural mechanism lead to efficient protection from photo-oxidative stress caused by exposure to short-wavelength light. The fact that fibre cells undergo incomplete apoptosis is also of crucial importance to other cellular systems. In particular, injured nerve cells such as axotomized retinal ganglion cells may profit from the apoptosis-blocking mechanisms operating within the lens fibres. In this review we first discuss some factors involved in the lens differentiation and partial apoptosis as a basic principle of long-term survival. We then present recent experimental evidence that lenticular factors also operate outside the lens, and in particular within the retina to contribute to axonal regeneration, e.g. after a trauma. In turn, factors such as GAP-43 that were thought to be exclusively expressed within nervous tissue have now also been discovered within the lenticular tissue. Experiments of the direct confrontation of lenticular epithelial and fibre cells with regenerating ganglion cell axons in vitro are presented. It is concluded that survival factors supplied by the lens might be used to facilitate survival within neuronal tissue.

Details about the publication

JournalProgress in Retinal and Eye Research (Prog Retin Eye Res)
Volume24
Issue2
Page range241-257
StatusPublished
Release year2005
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
Link to the full texthttps://reader.elsevier.com/reader/sd/pii/S1350946204000709?token=C1DE73ED6C1E6ADA8C4AB6BBC39DEE3583183B84712EC60FEE88C3547A0F9DAC6A3221CDDF712CFC12AA7AA382A9194F∨iginRegion=eu-west-1∨iginCreation=20230413142528
KeywordsGrowth Substances; Cell Adhesion Molecules; Humans; Research Support Non-U.S. Gov't. Apoptosis; Lens Crystalline; Animals; Cell Differentiation; Retinal Ganglion Cells; Cell Survival; Growth Substances; Cell Adhesion Molecules; Humans; Research Support Non-U.S. Gov't. Apoptosis; Lens Crystalline; Animals; Cell Differentiation; Retinal Ganglion Cells; Cell Survival

Authors from the University of Münster

Stupp, Tobias
Clinic for Ophthalmology
Thanos, Solon
Institut für Experimentelle Ophthalmologie