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Retinal de novo lipogenesis coordinates neurotrophic signaling to maintain vision
Rithwick Rajagopal, Sheng Zhang, Xiaochao Wei, Teresa Doggett, Sangeeta Adak, Jennifer Enright, Vaishali Shah, Guoyu Ling, Shiming Chen, Jun Yoshino, Fong-Fu Hsu, Clay F. Semenkovich
Rithwick Rajagopal, Sheng Zhang, Xiaochao Wei, Teresa Doggett, Sangeeta Adak, Jennifer Enright, Vaishali Shah, Guoyu Ling, Shiming Chen, Jun Yoshino, Fong-Fu Hsu, Clay F. Semenkovich
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Research Article Metabolism Ophthalmology

Retinal de novo lipogenesis coordinates neurotrophic signaling to maintain vision

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Abstract

Membrane lipid composition is central to the highly specialized functions of neurological tissues. In the retina, abnormal lipid metabolism causes severe forms of blindness, often through poorly understood neuronal cell death. Here, we demonstrate that deleting the de novo lipogenic enzyme fatty acid synthase (FAS) from the neural retina, but not the vascular retina, results in progressive neurodegeneration and blindness with a temporal pattern resembling rodent models of retinitis pigmentosa. Blindness was not rescued by protection from light-evoked activity; by eating a diet enriched in palmitate, the product of the FAS reaction; or by treatment with the PPARα agonist fenofibrate. Vision loss was due to aberrant synaptic structure, blunted responsiveness to glial-derived neurotrophic factor and ciliary neurotrophic factor, and eventual apoptotic cell loss. This progressive neurodegeneration was associated with decreased membrane cholesterol content, as well as loss of discrete n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid– and saturated fatty acid–containing phospholipid species within specialized membrane microdomains. Neurotrophic signaling was restored by exogenous cholesterol delivery. These findings implicate de novo lipogenesis in neurotrophin-dependent cell survival by maintaining retinal membrane configuration and lipid composition, and they suggest that ongoing lipogenesis may be required to prevent cell death in many forms of retinopathy.

Authors

Rithwick Rajagopal, Sheng Zhang, Xiaochao Wei, Teresa Doggett, Sangeeta Adak, Jennifer Enright, Vaishali Shah, Guoyu Ling, Shiming Chen, Jun Yoshino, Fong-Fu Hsu, Clay F. Semenkovich

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Figure 2

Loss of FAS activity is associated with progressive retinal degeneration.

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Loss of FAS activity is associated with progressive retinal degeneration...
(A) H&E-stained paraffin cross sections of neural retinal layers, with pseudorosette formation (arrowheads) in P60 FASKO compared with P28 FASKO and to controls. (B) Images from rod-specific FASKO at P60 compared with P28, as well as normal images from endothelial FASKO mice. (C) Representative detail of outer retinal pseudorosettes seen in both rod FASKO and pan retinal FASKO, with radially arranged and apposed photoreceptor outer segments. INL, inner nuclear layer; ONL, outer nuclear layer. (D and E) Quantification of retinal thickness changes in neural and endothelial FASKO compared with littermate controls (n = 4 animals/group for P28, P60, and P90 Pan Retina KO, P90 Rod KO, and P90 Endothelial KO panels; n = 6 animals/group for P28 and P60 Rod KO panels; 2-way ANOVA). Scale bar: 100 μm (A and B) and 25 μm (C). **P < 0.01, ****P < 0.0001.

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