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  • Involvement of all-trans-retinal in acute light-induced retinopathy of mice.

Involvement of all-trans-retinal in acute light-induced retinopathy of mice.

The Journal of biological chemistry (2009-03-24)
Akiko Maeda, Tadao Maeda, Marcin Golczak, Steven Chou, Amar Desai, Charles L Hoppel, Shigemi Matsuyama, Krzysztof Palczewski
ABSTRACT

Exposure to bright light can cause visual dysfunction and retinal photoreceptor damage in humans and experimental animals, but the mechanism(s) remain unclear. We investigated whether the retinoid cycle (i.e. the series of biochemical reactions required for vision through continuous generation of 11-cis-retinal and clearance of all-trans-retinal, respectively) might be involved. Previously, we reported that mice lacking two enzymes responsible for clearing all-trans-retinal, namely photoreceptor-specific ABCA4 (ATP-binding cassette transporter 4) and RDH8 (retinol dehydrogenase 8), manifested retinal abnormalities exacerbated by light and associated with accumulation of diretinoid-pyridinium-ethanolamine (A2E), a condensation product of all-trans-retinal and a surrogate marker for toxic retinoids. Now we show that these mice develop an acute, light-induced retinopathy. However, cross-breeding these animals with lecithin:retinol acyltransferase knock-out mice lacking retinoids within the eye produced progeny that did not exhibit such light-induced retinopathy until gavaged with the artificial chromophore, 9-cis-retinal. No significant ocular accumulation of A2E occurred under these conditions. These results indicate that this acute light-induced retinopathy requires the presence of free all-trans-retinal and not, as generally believed, A2E or other retinoid condensation products. Evidence is presented that the mechanism of toxicity may include plasma membrane permeability and mitochondrial poisoning that lead to caspase activation and mitochondria-associated cell death. These findings further understanding of the mechanisms involved in light-induced retinal degeneration.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Supelco
Retinyl Acetate (Vitamin A Acetate), Pharmaceutical Secondary Standard; Certified Reference Material
Supelco
Retinyl acetate, analytical standard
Sigma-Aldrich
Retinyl acetate, BioReagent, solid or viscous liquid, synthetic, suitable for cell culture
Sigma-Aldrich
Retinyl acetate, synthetic, matrix dispersion, 475,000-650,000 USP units/g
Sigma-Aldrich
Retinyl acetate, synthetic, crystalline solid or supercooled liquid
Retinol acetate, European Pharmacopoeia (EP) Reference Standard