Glaucoma is a disease in which current treatments focus on modifying a major risk factor, that is lowering intraocular pressure, rather than directly targeting the pathophysiological mechanisms in the retina or optic nerve that lead to ganglion cell death. This is because we still do not fully understand the underlying mechanisms of the disease. In many cases, lowering the intraocular pressure alone is not sufficient, and patients continue to lose their vision. Identifying new mechanisms that mediate ganglion cell degeneration will benefit the development of alternative treatments for glaucoma. A leading hypothesis in the pathophysiology of glaucoma is that astrocytes within the optic nerve head play an important role in the ganglion cell degeneration, albeit it is not clear what this role is. Astrocytes are a key focus because (1) they populate the optic nerve head, a site where early ganglion cell axon injury occurs, and (2) astrocytes in the optic nerve head become highly ?reactive?, a process that changes their morphology, function and molecular phenotype, but in the white matter of the CNS is not well understood. Using a loss-of-function transgenic mouse model, we recently showed that STAT3 signaling is a critical regulator of astrocyte reactivity within the glaucomatous optic nerve head. Knocking out STAT3 attenuates astrocyte reactivity, increasing ganglion cell degeneration and visual function loss. Astrocyte reactivity therefore functions by some mechanism to preserve vision, upturning the long prevailing belief that reactivity is simply detrimental in disease and that treatments must prevent it. Based on this initial observation, the overall goal of our proposed study is to investigate the mechanism by which astrocyte reactivity affects ganglion cell survival. This study is unique and novel in identifying and investigating a novel mechanistic pathway (the STAT3 signaling pathway) involved in glaucoma. Our method is to use targeted deletion of two specific genes from astrocytes to generate a loss-of-function (STAT3 knockout mice) and gain-of-function (SOCS3 knockout mice; the negative feedback molecule of STAT3) mouse model and determine how these affect histological, functional and molecular outcome measures following two different models of experiment glaucoma. In a final experiment, we will use a commercially available pharmacological agent to test the therapeutic potential of manipulating the STAT3 pathway and astrocyte reactivity towards a beneficial outcome.
Our specific aims to accomplish our goal are to test the following hypotheses: (1) that STAT3 knockout, which attenuates astrocyte reactivity, increases pathological processes in the glaucomatous optic nerve, particularly processes related to inflammation/immunity, and (2) that increasing STAT3 activation and enhancing astrocyte reactivity will improve histological and functional outcome. As glaucoma is the second leading cause of blindness worldwide, this proposal will address a major public health concern.

Public Health Relevance

Glaucoma is the second leading cause of blindness worldwide, and although we know that elevated intraocular pressure is a major risk factor we still don't understand the fundamental pathophysiology of the disease, particularly how the retinal ganglion cells degenerate. As a consequence, current treatments do not focus directly on saving the ganglion cells, but rather on lowering the intraocular pressure, which for many patients is insufficient and leads to continued progression of the vision loss. This proposal directly addresses a pathophysiological mechanism of ganglion cell damage in glaucoma, specifically investigating the interaction between optic nerve head astrocytes and the ganglion cell axons they ensheath, and whether affecting this interaction has therapeutic promise.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01EY029268-01
Application #
9575279
Study Section
Diseases and Pathophysiology of the Visual System Study Section (DPVS)
Program Officer
Liberman, Ellen S
Project Start
2018-09-01
Project End
2023-05-31
Budget Start
2018-09-01
Budget End
2019-05-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Schepens Eye Research Institute
Department
Type
DUNS #
073826000
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code