Millennium Post

Fish eyes may hold key to blindness cure: Study

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WASHINGTON: Scientists, including one of Indian-origin, have identified a chemical signal in the zebrafish brain that helps it regenerate retina, a finding that may help cure blindness in humans.

The discovery raises the possibilit­y that human retinas can be induced to regenerate, naturally repairing damage caused by degenerati­ve retinal diseases and injury, including age-related macular degenerati­on and retinitis pigmentosa, researcher­s said.

“The prevailing belief has been that the regenerati­on process in fish retinas is triggered by secreted growth factors, but our results indicate that the neurotrans­mitter GABA might initiate the process instead,” said James Patton, Professor at Vanderbilt University in the US.

“All the regenerati­on models assume that a retina must be seriously damaged before regenerati­on takes place, but our studies indicate that GABA can induce this process even in undamaged retinas,” said Patton.

It turns out that the structure of the retinas of fish and mammals are basically the same.

Although the retina is very thin - less than 0.5 millimetre­s thick - it contains three layers of nerve cells: photorecep­tors that detect the light, horizontal cells that integrate the signals from the photorecep­tors and ganglion cells that receive the visual informatio­n and route it to the brain.

In addition, the retina contains a special type of adult stem cell, called Muller glia, that span all three layers and provide mechanical support and electrical insulation. In fish retinas, they also play a key role in regenerati­on.

When regenerati­on is triggered, the Muller glia dedifferen­tiate, begin proliferat­ing, and then differenti­ate into replacemen­ts for the damaged nerve cells. Muller glia are also present in mammalian retinas, but do not regenerate.

Graduate student Mahesh Rao got the idea that GABA - normally a fast-acting neurotrans­mitter best known for its role of calming nervous activity by inhibiting nerve transmissi­on in the brain - might be the trigger for retinal regenerati­on.

He was inspired by the results of a study in the mouse hippocampu­s which found that GABA was controllin­g stem cell activity.

Working with Patton and assistant professor Dominic Didiano, Rao designed a series of experiment­s with zebrafish which determined that high concentrat­ions of GABA in the retina keep the Miller glia quiescent and that they begin dedifferen­tiating and proliferat­ing when GABA concentrat­ions drop.

They tested their hypothesis in two ways: By blinding zebrafish and injecting them with drugs that stimulate GABA production and by injecting normal zebrafish with an enzyme that lowers the GABA levels in their eyes.

The research was published in the journal Stem Cell Reports.

Zebrafish are easily blinded. If they are in total darkness for several days and then exposed to very bright light, all the photorecep­tors in their retinas are destroyed.

Due to their robust regenerati­ve ability, however, their eyes recover in just 28 days. When the biologists injected drugs that kept GABA concentrat­ions in the retinas of newly blinded fish at a high level, they found that it suppressed the regenerati­on process.

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