[HTML][HTML] Inducing a visceral organ to protect a peripheral capillary bed: Stabilizing hepatic HIF-1α prevents oxygen-induced retinopathy

G Hoppe, TJ Lee, S Yoon, M Yu, NS Peachey… - The American journal of …, 2014 - Elsevier
G Hoppe, TJ Lee, S Yoon, M Yu, NS Peachey, M Rayborn, MJ Zutel, G Trichonas, J Au…
The American journal of pathology, 2014Elsevier
Activation of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) can prevent oxygen-induced retinopathy in
rodents. Here we demonstrate that dimethyloxaloylglycine (DMOG)-induced retinovascular
protection is dependent on hepatic HIF-1 because mice deficient in liver-specific HIF-1α
experience hyperoxia-induced damage even with DMOG treatment, whereas DMOG-treated
wild-type mice have 50% less avascular retina (P< 0.0001). Hepatic HIF stabilization
protects retinal function because DMOG normalizes the b-wave on electroretinography in …
Activation of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) can prevent oxygen-induced retinopathy in rodents. Here we demonstrate that dimethyloxaloylglycine (DMOG)-induced retinovascular protection is dependent on hepatic HIF-1 because mice deficient in liver-specific HIF-1α experience hyperoxia-induced damage even with DMOG treatment, whereas DMOG-treated wild-type mice have 50% less avascular retina (P < 0.0001). Hepatic HIF stabilization protects retinal function because DMOG normalizes the b-wave on electroretinography in wild-type mice. The localization of DMOG action to the liver is further supported by evidence that i) mRNA and protein erythropoietin levels within liver and serum increased in DMOG-treated wild-type animals but are reduced by 60% in liver-specific HIF-1α knockout mice treated with DMOG, ii) triple-positive (Sca1/cKit/VEGFR2), bone-marrow–derived endothelial precursor cells increased twofold in DMOG-treated wild-type mice (P < 0.001) but are unchanged in hepatic HIF-1α knockout mice in response to DMOG, and iii) hepatic luminescence in the luciferase oxygen-dependent degradation domain mouse was induced by subcutaneous and intraperitoneal DMOG. These findings uncover a novel endocrine mechanism for retinovascular protection. Activating HIF in visceral organs such as the liver may be a simple strategy to protect capillary beds in the retina and in other peripheral tissues.
Elsevier