Litcius/Paper detail

Chemiexcitation and melanin in photoreceptor disc turnover and prevention of macular degeneration

Yanan Lyu, Alexander Tschulakow, Kun Wang, Douglas E. Brash, Ulrich Schraermeyer

2023Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Age-related macular degeneration, Stargardt disease, and their Abca4 -/- mouse model are characterized by accelerated accumulation of the pigment lipofuscin, derived from photoreceptor disc turnover in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE); lipofuscin accumulation and retinal degeneration both occur earlier in albino mice. Intravitreal injection of superoxide (O 2 •– ) generators reverses lipofuscin accumulation and rescues retinal pathology, but neither the target nor mechanism is known. Here we show that RPE contains thin multi-lamellar membranes (TLMs) resembling photoreceptor discs, which associate with melanolipofuscin granules in pigmented mice but in albinos are 10-fold more abundant and reside in vacuoles. Genetically over-expressing tyrosinase in albinos generates melanosomes and decreases TLM-related lipofuscin. Intravitreal injection of generators of O 2 •– or nitric oxide ( • NO) decreases TLM-related lipofuscin in melanolipofuscin granules of pigmented mice by ~50% in 2 d, but not in albinos. Prompted by evidence that O 2 •– plus • NO creates a dioxetane on melanin that excites its electrons to a high-energy state (termed “chemiexcitation”), we show that exciting electrons directly using a synthetic dioxetane reverses TLM-related lipofuscin even in albinos; quenching the excited-electron energy blocks this reversal. Melanin chemiexcitation assists in safe photoreceptor disc turnover.

Topics & Concepts

LipofuscinMelanosomeRetinal pigment epitheliumMacular degenerationMelaninRetinal degenerationRetinaRetinalCell biologyBiologyTyrosinaseZeaxanthinChemistryBiophysicsBiochemistryOphthalmologyMedicineNeuroscienceLuteinEnzymeCarotenoidRetinal Development and Disordersmelanin and skin pigmentationPhotoreceptor and optogenetics research