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Prog Retin Eye ResAugust 2020117 citations

Normal and glaucomatous outflow regulation.

Acott Ted S, Vranka Janice A, Keller Kate E, Raghunathan VijayKrishna, Kelley Mary J


AI Summary

Glaucoma involves impaired IOP homeostasis due to TM cell loss and stiffer outflow pathways. Normal eyes actively regulate outflow resistance; restoring TM cells can restore this, offering therapeutic insights.

Abstract

Glaucoma remains only partially understood, particularly at the level of intraocular pressure (IOP) regulation. Trabecular meshwork (TM) and Schlemm's canal inner wall endothelium (SCE) are key to IOP regulation and their characteristics and behavior are the focus of much investigation. This is becoming more apparent with time. We and others have studied the TM and SCE's extracellular matrix (ECM) extensively and unraveled much about its functions and role in regulating aqueous outflow. Ongoing ECM turnover is required to maintain IOP regulation and several TM ECM manipulations modulate outflow facility. We have established clearly that the outflow pathway senses sustained pressure deviations and responds by adjusting the outflow resistance correctively to keep IOP within an appropriately narrow range which will not normally damage the optic nerve. The glaucomatous outflow pathway has in many cases lost this IOP homeostatic response, apparently due at least in part, to loss of TM cells. Depletion of TM cells eliminates the IOP homeostatic response, while restoration of TM cells restores it. Aqueous outflow is not homogeneous, but rather segmental with regions of high, intermediate and low flow. In general, glaucomatous eyes have more low flow regions than normal eyes. There are distinctive molecular differences between high and low flow regions, and during the response to an IOP homeostatic pressure challenge, additional changes in segmental molecular composition occur. In conjunction with these changes, the biomechanical properties of the juxtacanalicular (JCT) segmental regions are different, with low flow regions being stiffer than high flow regions. The JCT ECM of glaucomatous eyes is around 20 times stiffer than in normal eyes. The aqueous humor outflow resistance has been studied extensively, but neither the exact molecular components that comprise the resistance nor their exact location have been established. Our hypothetical model, based on considerable available data, posits that the continuous SCE basal lamina, which lies between 125 and 500 nm beneath the SCE basal surface, is the primary source of normal resistance. On the surface of JCT cells, small and highly controlled focal degradation of its components by podosome- or invadopodia-like structures, PILS, occurs in response to pressure-induced mechanical stretching. Sub-micron sized basement membrane discontinuities develop in the SCE basement membrane and these discontinuities allow passage of aqueous humor to and through SCE giant vacuoles and pores. JCT cells then relocate versican with its highly charged glycosaminoglycan side chains into the discontinuities and by manipulation of their orientation and concentration, the JCT and perhaps the SCE cells regulate the amount of fluid passage. Testing this outflow resistance hypothesis is ongoing in our lab and has the potential to advance our understanding of IOP regulation and of glaucoma.


MeSH Terms

Aqueous HumorGlaucomaHumansIntraocular PressureTonometry, OcularTrabecular Meshwork

Key Concepts5

The outflow pathway senses sustained pressure deviations and responds by adjusting the outflow resistance correctively to keep intraocular pressure (IOP) within an appropriately narrow range, which will not normally damage the optic nerve.

MechanismReviewn=Not applicableCh1Ch2

The glaucomatous outflow pathway has in many cases lost its intraocular pressure (IOP) homeostatic response, apparently due at least in part, to loss of trabecular meshwork (TM) cells.

MechanismReviewn=Not applicableCh1Ch2

Depletion of trabecular meshwork (TM) cells eliminates the intraocular pressure (IOP) homeostatic response, while restoration of TM cells restores it.

MechanismReviewn=Not applicableCh1Ch2

The juxtacanalicular (JCT) extracellular matrix (ECM) of glaucomatous eyes is around 20 times stiffer than in normal eyes.

MechanismReviewn=Not applicableCh1Ch2

The continuous Schlemm's canal inner wall endothelium (SCE) basal lamina, which lies between 125 and 500 nm beneath the SCE basal surface, is posited to be the primary source of normal aqueous humor outflow resistance.

MechanismReviewn=Not applicableCh1Ch2

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