Neurobiology of Disease (Nov 2006)

Partial mitochondrial complex I inhibition induces oxidative damage and perturbs glutamate transport in primary retinal cultures.

  • Simone Beretta,
  • John P.M. Wood,
  • Barry Derham,
  • Gessica Sala,
  • Lucio Tremolizzo,
  • Carlo Ferrarese,
  • Neville N. Osborne

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 2
pp. 308 – 317

Abstract

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Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) is a maternally inherited form of visual loss, due to selective degeneration of retinal ganglion cells. Despite the established aetiological association between LHON and mitochondrial DNA mutations affecting complex I of the electron transport chain, the pathophysiology of this disorder remains obscure. Primary rat retinal cultures were exposed to increasing concentrations of rotenone to titrate complex I inhibition. Neural cells were more sensitive than Müller glial cells to rotenone toxicity. Rotenone induced an increase in mitochondrial-derived free radicals and lipid peroxidation. Sodium-dependent glutamate uptake, which is mostly mediated by the glutamate transporter GLAST expressed by Müller glial cells, was reduced dose-dependently by rotenone with no changes in GLAST expression. Our findings suggest that complex I-derived free radicals and disruption of glutamate transport might represent key elements for explaining the selective retinal ganglion cell death in LHON.

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