Abstract
N-Methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-induced neuronal cell death is involved in a large spectrum of diseases affecting the brain and the retina such as Alzheimer’s disease and diabetic retinopathy. Associated neurological impairments may result from the inhibition of neuronal plasticity by Nogo-A. The objective of the current study was to determine the contribution of Nogo-A to NMDA excitotoxicity in the mouse retina. We observed that Nogo-A is upregulated in the mouse vitreous during NMDA-induced inflammation. Intraocular injection of a function-blocking antibody specific to Nogo-A (11C7) was carried out 2 days after NMDA-induced injury. This treatment significantly enhanced visual function recovery in injured animals. Strikingly, the expression of potent pro-inflammatory molecules was downregulated by 11C7, among which TNFα was the most durably decreased cytokine in microglia/macrophages. Additional analyses suggest that TNFα downregulation may stem from cofilin inactivation in microglia/macrophages. 11C7 also limited gliosis presumably via P.Stat3 downregulation. Diabetic retinopathy was associated with increased levels of Nogo-A in the eyes of donors. In summary, our results reveal that Nogo-A-targeting antibody can stimulate visual recovery after retinal injury and that Nogo-A is a potent modulator of excitotoxicity-induced neuroinflammation. These data may be used to design treatments against inflammatory eye diseases.
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Introduction
Excitotoxic cell death mediated by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor activation plays a central role in the neurodegenerative diseases affecting the CNS, including the retina1,2,3,4. In retinal diseases such as diabetic retinopathy, irreversible visual deficits have been linked to NMDA receptor overactivation5,6,7 that results in the death of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), the output neurons of the retina that normally ensure the transfer of visual information from the eye to the brain8,9. The toxic levels of glutamate in diabetic retinal7 and vitreous5 samples are due to the defects in glutamate detoxification7 and reuptake10 by glial cells. Consistently, intravitreal injections of NMDA in rodents is a classical model to study the mechanisms of excitotoxity in the retina8,11,12,13.
In the present study, we wondered if Nogo-A influenced the development of excitotoxic damage in the retina. Nogo-A is a potent myelin-associated inhibitor for neuronal plasticity and axonal regeneration in the injured CNS14,15. At the molecular level, three distinct inhibitory domains of Nogo-A have been identified16. In its N-term part, Nogo-A contains an amino acid sequence inhibiting fibroblast cell spreading. A specific central region of the protein called Nogo-A-Delta 20 restricts cell spreading and neurite outgrowth and a C-term domain called Nogo-66 promotes growth cone collapse. The cell transduction mechanisms of Nogo-A depend on the interaction between its three domains and different receptor partners. Nogo-66 binds and activates a receptor complex composed of Nogo-66 receptor 1 (NgR1)17, Lingo-118 and p75/Troy19,20 leading to actin cytoskeleton disassembly via the small GTPase RhoA21. On the other hand, Nogo-A-Delta 20 can be a ligand for sphingosine 1-phosphate receptors (S1PR)22. Its binding to S1PR2 intracellularly activates the RhoA-ROCK pathway in fibroblasts and neuronal cells. Targeting Nogo-A-Delta 20 with neutralizing antibodies such as 11C7 was shown to promote neurological recovery in experimental models of stroke23,24,25 and spinal cord injury26,27.
The involvement of Nogo-A in pathological mechanisms affecting the retina suggests that Nogo-A-targeting antibodies may also improve vision in ocular diseases. Our recent results revealed that blocking Nogo-A-Delta 20 with intravitreal injection of 11C7 antibody dramatically increased vascular repair and neuronal function in the retina of mice subjected to ischemic retinopathy28. In adult mice, we also reported that Nogo-A KO mice had better visual recovery after retinal injury than WT animals29. Here, we hypothesized that retinal Nogo-A may inhibit injured neuron repair28,30,31,32,33. Indeed, immunofluorescent observations revealed high levels of Nogo-A in radial Müller glia, a specialized retinal glia, and to a lower extent in RGCs.
In this study, retinal injury caused the simultaneous release of Nogo-A and TNFα in the mouse vitreous. Neutralizing Nogo-A-Delta 20 with intravitreal injection of 11C7 improved visual function recovery and strongly reduced inflammation at the same time. Importantly, Nogo-A was dramatically increased in the retina and in the vitreous humor of donors suffering from diabetic retinopathy. Taken together, these results unveil a new function of Nogo-A in retinal inflammation.
Materials and methods
Animals
In this study, adult male C57BL/6J mice were purchased from the Jackson Laboratory and were used at 2–4 months of age. All animal experiments were carried out in accordance with the guidelines of the Canadian Council on Animal Care and of the Animal Welfare Committee of the Université Laval.
Intraocular injections
To induce retinal injury, 2 µl of NMDA (0.5–40 nmol) were injected in the left eye using a 10-µl Hamilton syringe, under general anesthesia with isoflurane, as previously described29,32,33,34,35. In brief, the glass tipped needle was delicately inserted through the sclera of the eyeball by taking care not to injure the lens. To allow NMDA diffusion in the vitreous and limit its backflow, the needle was held in place for 3 min and then slowly withdrawn. A drop of surgical glue (Histoacryl®, Braun) was applied to seal the injection site. The same procedure was used for the injection of the function-blocking antibody 11C7 (IgG1 serotype, 2 μg/eye, a gift from Prof Martin Schwab, Univ Zurich,), raised against Nogo-A-Delta 2016, or control IgG (IgG1 serotype, clone FG12/B5, 2 μg/eye, Antibody Production Service Ltd)29, 2 days after NMDA injection.
Optokinetic reflex test
To evaluate the visual acuity of freely moving mice, the optokinetic reflex was tested using OptoDrum system (Striatech GmbH Vor dem Kreuzberg, Tübingen, Germany). In brief, mice (6–9/group) were placed on a platform in the middle of an arena surrounded by four computer screens while moving gratings of different spatial frequencies were passed on the monitors36,37. The reflexive tracking movement of the mouse neck in the temporal-to-nasal direction allowed to evaluate the visual response of the two eyes separately by changing the direction of the visual stimulus. For statistical analysis, a two-way ANOVA was applied (GraphPad Prism, GraphPad Software, La Jolla, CA, USA).
Electroretinogram (ERG) recording
A Ganzfeld system (Phoenix Research Labs, Pleasanton, CA, USA) was used to record photopic ERGs in mice (5–9/group) anesthetized with a ketamine/xylazine mixture, as described before28,38. Prior to recording, a drop of 1% Mydriacyl Tropicamide was applied on the cornea for pupil dilation. A sterile ophthalmic gel (Tear-Gel, Baush & Lomb) was used to prevent corneal desiccation and to allow the contact between the cornea and the electrode (gold-plate objective lens). ERGs were generated in response to flash stimulations of increasing intensities, ranging from 1.0 log cd.s.m2 to 2.8 log cd.s.m2 (inter-stimulus interval, 20 ms; flash duration, 1 ms; average of 20 flashes, 0.6 log-unit increment). The use of green (504 nm) and UV (365 nm) lights allowed to record M-cone and the S-cone-dependent ERG waveforms respectively. The amplitude of the b-wave was measured from the a-wave trough to the highest peak. Statistical analysis was performed using a two-way ANOVA followed by Tukey post hoc test (GraphPad Prism).
Tissue preparation for histological analysis
Mice were euthanized using a lethal dose of ketamine/xylazine mixture (90–10 mg/kg). Tissues were fixed by intracardial perfusion of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and 4-% paraformaldehyde (PFA) solutions. Eyes and optic nerves were dissected for retinal and optic nerve sections (14-µm thick), or retinal flat-mount preparation.
Retinal ganglion cell (RGC) and amacrine cell survival
The survival of RGCs and amacrine cells was evaluated 43 days after NMDA injection on retinal flat-mounts of 6–9 mice for each experimental group. Retinal flat-mounts were post-fixed overnight in 4% PFA, rinsed with PBS three times, incubated for 1 h in a blocking solution (PBS containing 5% bovine serum albumin (BSA), 0.3% Triton X-100, and 0.01% sodium azide) and incubated for 5 days at room temperature with the following primary antibodies: rabbit anti-RNA binding protein with multiple splicing (RBPMS) (1:200, PhosphoSolutions, Aurora, CO, USA, #1830-RBPMS) or goat anti-choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) (1:100, Millipore, #AB144P). After intensive washing, retinal flat-mounts were incubated for 2 days at room temperature with appropriate secondary antibodies diluted in the blocking solution. Vectashield solution (BioLynx, Brockville, ON, Canada) was used as a mounting medium. Cells were counted in regions of 62,500 µm2 at 0.5, 1, 1.5, and 2 mm from the optic disk in the four retinal quadrants. Statistical differences were evaluated using an unpaired t-test (GraphPad Prism).
Immunofluorescence on retinal and optic nerve cryosections
Retinal eye cups and optic nerves were post-fixed overnight in 4% PFA and immersed in a solution of 30% of sucrose for cryo-protection before tissue embedding in optimal cutting temperature (Cedarlane, Burlington, ON, Canada) medium. 14-µm thick cryosections were collected on Superfrost microscope glass slides. For immunostaining, tissue slices were incubated for 1 h in a blocking solution and then overnight with primary antibodies at 4 °C (see Table 1). After three washes with PBS sections were incubated at room temperature with the appropriate secondary antibodies. Slides were mounted with the Vectashield mounting medium. For microscopy and image acquisition, mosaic pictures were taken with a Zeiss AxioImager M2 microscope equipped with a motorized platform and the ZEN software and a LSM 700 scanning confocal microscope (Zeiss). All quantifications were performed using 5–6 central retinal or optic nerve cuts/mouse. At least 3 mice were used per experimental condition. In quantitative analyses, statistical significance was evaluated using a one-way ANOVA followed by Dunnett’s post hoc test.
Western blot analysis
Retinae were quickly isolated from the eyes, snap frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at −80 °C until protein lysate preparation. Retinae were homogenized for 60 min on ice in Eppendorf tubes containing lysis buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, 0.5% CHAPS, pH 8.0) and protease/phosphatase inhibitor (Roche Diagnostics, Laval, QC, Canada) and centrifuged for 15 min at 15,000 × g at 4 °C. Supernatants were then retrieved and used for protein assay (BioRad, Mississauga, ON, Canada). Retinal proteins (20 μg/well) were resolved by electrophoresis on 4–12% gradient polyacrylamide gels and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. Nitrocellulose membranes were pre-incubated in a blocking solution of 5% BSA dissolved in TBST (Tris-base 0.1 M, 0.2% Tween 20, pH 7.4) for 1 h at room temperature, incubated with primary antibodies overnight at 4 °C (see Table 1). After washes, membranes were incubated with a horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-mouse or anti-rabbit antibody (1:10 000; Pierce Biotechnology, Burlington, ON, Canada). Chemiluminescent bands were detected with LiCor Western Sure Premium Chemiluminescent Substrate (Mandel, Guelph, ON, Canada) in a LiCor C-Digit blot scanner (Mandel). Band signals were quantified with the ImageJ software and analyzed with the GraphPad Prism software. To study the dose-dependent effects of NMDA on retinal protein expression changes, 3 mice were used for each experimental condition. In this case, statistics were done using a one-way ANOVA followed by Dunnett’s post hoc test (GraphPad Prism). The effects of 11C7 and control IgG were analyzed in retinal and vitreous lysates using 3–5 mice per group, as indicated in the figure legends. Statistical analysis was performed using an unpaired t-test (GraphPad Prism).
Semi-qRT-PCR
Animals were sacrificed by cervical dislocation and tissue rapidly obtained before being flash-frozen in liquid nitrogen. Eppendorf tubes of the tissue collected were stored at −80 °C until RNA could be extracted. To prepare total retinal RNA, an RNeasy isolation kit (Qiagen, Toronto, ON, Canada) was used. Residual genomic DNA was eliminated by use of a DNase treatment. Oligo (dt) and M-MLV reverse transcriptase (Fisher Scientific) was used to transform equal amounts of RNA for reverse transcription. Amplification of ten nanograms of cDNA with the SYBR Green I Master polymerase ready mix (Roche Diagnostics Canada) was done using the Light Cycler 480 thermocycler (Roche Diagnostics Canada). Primer pairs were made to span the intronic sequences or to cover exon-intron boundaries (see Table 2 for sequences). The comparative threshold cycle (ΔΔCT) method was used to calculate the relative quantification. As a reference gene and control sample, Gapdh was used to normalize cDNA levels. Each reaction was done in triplicate for 4–6 mice per condition. Statistical analysis was performed by applying an unpaired t-test (GraphPad Prism).
Human retina histology and vitreous analyses
All patients involved in the study signed an informed consent prior to vitreous or retinal use. Experiments with human samples have been approved by the Comité d’éthique de la recherche du CHU de Québec-Université Laval. For immunofluorescence observations, human retinal sections were obtained from a french eye bank association (Banque française des yeux, Paris, France). Paraffin sections were cut from the eye of a non-diabetic, 71-year-old male donor. The cause of the death was renal insufficiency. Diabetic retinal sections came from a 85-year old male donor suffering from type 2 diabetes, treated with insulin and presenting non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy with macular edema. The origin of the death was lung carcinoma. For the two donors, retinae where collected up to 20 h post-mortem. Retinal cross sections were stained for glutamine synthetase (GS antibody, 1:300, MAB 302, Chemicon Technology, Merck Millipore, Billerica, Massachusetts, USA), for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP antibody, 1:300, Abcam, ab49874, Cambridge, UK) and Nogo-A (11C7 antibody, 1:200). For the detection of Nogo-A in the human vitreous, vitreous samples were collected by an experienced ophthalmologist of the Hôpital du Saint-Sacrement of the Centre Universitaire d’ophtalmologie in Quebec City, Canada. Analyzed samples were obtained from two non-diabetic male patients of 73 and 75 years of age treated for retinal detachment and epiretinal membrane, respectively. Vitreous of diabetic patients were obtained from a 77-year-old man, without diabetic retinopathy, and from a 68-year-old woman with proliferative diabetic retinopathy. To monitor the protein level of Nogo-A, fifteen microliters of vitreous was analyzed by western blot using 11C7 antibody (1:2000). The ability of 11C7 to detect human Nogo-A was validated using recombinant Nogo-A protein (Abcam, ab163499).
Results
Retinal excitotoxicity increases the level of Nogo-A proteins in the vitreous of mice
Nogo-A is endogenously expressed in Müller glia and ganglion cell (RGC) bodies30,32,33. By immunofluorescence and western blotting (Fig. 1), we set out to determine if NMDA-induced neuronal cell death was associated with changes in Nogo-A localization and expression. Three hours after NMDA intravitreal injection (2 nmol/eye), RGC lysis was established by the observation of fragments labeled with RNA-binding protein with multiple splicing (RBPMS), a protein selectively localized in the soma of RGCs39, suggesting quick extracellular spill of RGC cytoplasm after excitotoxicity induction (Fig. 1a). On retinal cross sections, 24 h after NMDA-induced injury, many large soma-sized RGCs expressing RBPMS and Nogo-A were lost (Fig. 1b, c). In NMDA-treated animals, remaining RGCs displayed a weak signal for Nogo-A (Fig. 1b, c, arrow). However, Nogo-A fluorescent signal was not much different in Müller cell processes labeled with glutamine synthetase (GS), compared with that observed in intact or PBS-injected retinae. To further investigate the possible release of Nogo-A following NMDA-induced RGC lysis, a Western blot analysis of retinal and vitreal lysates was undertaken (Fig. 1d–g). The level of Nogo-A protein did not significantly change after the injection of increasing doses of NMDA in the vitreous humor (Fig. 1d). The phosphorylation of Stat3 and Erk1/2 has been shown to participate in the neuronal and glial response to retinal injury12,40,41,42 and was thus used to monitor the reaction of retinal cells to NMDA injury. We observed that P.Stat3 and P.Erk1/2 were upregulated by NMDA in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 1d). In contrast, the lack of change for Nogo-A (Fig. 1d) is attributable to stable expression in Müller glia, i.e. the cells constituting the main source of this protein in the whole retina30,31,32,33. Strikingly, however, Nogo-A proteins dose-dependently increased in the vitreous of eyes treated with NMDA (Fig. 1e). The Nogo-A proteins observed in the vitreous were full-length Nogo-A and protein fragments that were named Nogo-A-F1 and Nogo-A-F2. Similar Nogo-A proteins could be detected in the vitreous of NMDA-injected eyes using antibodies recognizing its three inhibitory domains (Fig. 1f, g). Coincidental increase of the TNFα cytokine level suggests a link between retinal inflammation and Nogo-A elevation in the vitreous. Interestingly, Nogo-A could not be detected in the vitreous of mice subjected to the model of optic nerve injury (data not shown), a lesion paradigm whose damage exclusively depends on apoptosis43. In this process, apoptotic cell bodies are phagocytosed without cytoplasmic spillover in surrounding tissues. Taken together, these results suggest that Nogo-A proteins are released by RGCs in the vitreous after excitotoxic shock.
Targeting Nogo-A-Delta 20 with a function-blocking antibody improves visual recovery after retinal injury
The detection of Nogo-A-Delta 20 in the vitreous of injured eyes suggests that it may contribute to visual function loss after injury. This region of Nogo-A strongly inhibits neuronal repair/plasticity in the CNS44 but can efficiently be neutralized in vivo using 11C7 antibody26,27,28,29,45. We therefore tested the function of Nogo-A-Delta 20 in NMDA-induced visual deficits by injecting 11C7 (2 μg/eye) or an equal amount of control IgG in the mouse vitreous (Fig. 2a). In order to assess the therapeutic potential of anti-Nogo-A-Delta 20 antibody in retinal injuries, our experimental design consisted of performing the injection of 11C7 two days after that of NMDA (Fig. 2a). Given the fast kinetic of RGC cell elimination that is usually observed after NMDA injection12,13,46, a 2-day delay between antibody and NMDA treatment is relatively long and is thus expected to minimize the influence of 11C7 on RGC survival. The optokinetic response was evaluated repeatedly before and after injury to monitor visual function variations29,40. Electroretinogram recordings allowed to follow retinal cell activity upstream of RGCs28,38. A quantitative analysis of surviving RGCs was carried out on retinal flat-mounts stained for RBPMS (Fig. 2b). In these conditions, intraocular injection of 0.5 nmol and 2 nmol of NMDA gave rise to moderate (~30%) and massive (~70%) elimination of RGCs (Fig. 2b). The magnitude of RGC death obtained with 0.5 nmol of NMDA in our study is similar to that observed after prolonged ocular hypertension in mouse glaucoma models, as reported by others47. As anticipated, 11C7 did not change the density of surviving RGCs at either dose of NMDA (Fig. 2b). Similarly, the death of cholinergic amacrine cells was not affected by 11C7 in the inner nuclear layer and in the ganglion cell layer (Data not shown). However, visual function was significantly increased by 11C7 treatment after the injection of 0.5 nmol of NMDA (Fig. 2c, d). After 2 nmol of NMDA, only a trend towards an improvement could be noticed, probably due to massive neuronal cell death (Fig. 2c, d). Moreover, 11C7 did not affect ERG wave amplitudes, suggesting that it is not protective for the retinal activity generated by cells upstream of RGCs (Fig. S1). Together, these results show that inhibiting Nogo-A-Delta 20 with a single injection of 11C7 is sufficient to increase visual recovery without affecting neuronal survival.
Nogo-A antibody inhibits monocyte-mediated inflammation in the injured retina
In order to determine the mode of action of 11C7 in retinal function recovery, changes in gene expression were followed by qRT-PCR measurements, after NMDA injection (0.5 nmol) and antibody treatments (Fig. 3a, b). We observed that 11C7 significantly downregulated the expression of genes involved in inflammation and monocyte activation such as those of Tnf, F4/80, Csf1, Cd68, 3 days after injury (*P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; Unpaired t-test). Strikingly, the mRNA level of Tnf was decreased by ~70% and ~80% at 3 and 7 days post injury respectively. Tnf and Sprr1a mRNA were the only transcripts that showed sustained decreases at 7 days (Fig. 3b). Interestingly, it has been proposed that Sprr1a upregulation reflected the RGC response to injury35,48,49. The lower level of Sprr1a mRNA in 11C7-treated retinae, therefore, suggests weaker RGC stress post-injury, perhaps due to TNFα decrease50. To further characterize TNFα protein changes, vitreous samples were analyzed by Western Blotting the day following antibody administration (Fig. 3c). The level of TNFα trimers was reduced by ~70% in eyes receiving 11C7 compared with those injected with control IgG (Fig. 3c, **P < 0.01, unpaired t-test). Immunofluorescent stainings allowed to visualize TNFα in Iba1-expressing monocytes (macrophages/microglia) on injured retinal flat-mounts (Fig. 3d). 11C7 markedly decreased the intensity of TNFα signal in NMDA-treated retinae. Quantitatively, the number of TNFα-expressing cells was decreased by ~66% after 11C7 delivery compared with control IgG treatment (Fig. 4a–c). However, the number of Iba1-positive cells did not statistically differ between 11C7 and control IgG treatments (Fig. 4c). According to previous studies, pathological increase of TNFα in the retina can cause delayed and protracted degeneration of axons and oligodendrocytes in the mouse optic nerve47,51. However, the examination of olig2-positive oligodendrocytes and Smi32-positive axons did not show differences after NMDA injection and after antibody treatments (Figs. S2, S3). Combined, these results suggest that neutralizing Nogo-A-Delta 20 with a blocking antibody strongly inhibits TNFα expression in microglia/macrophages after retinal injury.
Nogo-A modulates phosphorylation signalings controlling retinal gliosis
We then sought to know if antibody-mediated Nogo-A blockade modified intracellular phosphorylation cascades involved in retinal cell inflammation and gliosis. To address this, Western blot analysis was focused on cofilin, an actin-severing enzyme whose phosphorylation and inactivation in microglia has been shown to prevent TNFα secretion52, and Stat3 and Erk1/2 whose phosphorylation level increases in neuronal and glial cell in response to cytokine stimulation during inflammation53,54. The level of phosphorylated/inactive cofilin was dramatically increased by 11C7 compared with control animals receiving IgG (Fig. 5a, b). By immunofluorescence, P.cofilin appeared upregulated in Iba1-expressing microglia/macrophages on retinal sections (Fig. 5c), suggesting that TNFα downregulation may be due to cofilin inactivation in 11C7-treated eyes52. In parallel, 11C7 induced P.Stat3 downregulation in Müller glia labeled with GS and in blood vessels stained with isolectin B4 (Fig. 5a, b, d). Stat3 is known to control vimentin and GFAP upregulation in gliotic Müller cells55. In the present study, its decrease after 11C7 injection may be responsible for the downregulation of vimentin and, to lower extent Gfap, mRNA (Fig. 3a). In addition, P.Erk1/2 upregulation was detected by Western Blotting in 11C7-treated retinal samples (Fig. 5a, b). This increase occurred in Müller cells as shown by the localization of P.Erk1/2 in the nucleus of GS-stained cells (Fig. 5e). P.Erk1/2 elevation may have neuroprotective functions against excitotoxicity in the retina56. Together, our results suggest that neutralizing Nogo-A with 11C7 counteracts signaling events controlling gliosis and inflammation.
Nogo-A is upregulated in the retina of patients with diabetic retinopathy
We then checked if the expression of Nogo-A was increased in the vitreous and in the retina of donors suffering from diabetic retinopathy (DR). At the onset of the disease, the excitotoxic elimination of RGCs and neuroinflammation are thought to mediate visual decline57,58,59. Western blot analysis showed that the level of Nogo-A was increased in the vitreous of patients with diabetes, with or without diabetic retinopathy, compared with samples collected in non-diabetic subjects (Fig. 6a, b). Immunofluorescent observations were then realized on histological sections of retinae from non-diabetic (Fig. 6c) and DR patients (Fig. 6d, e). In the absence of diabetes, Nogo-A was endogenously localized in neuronal cell bodies of the ganglion cell layer and in Müller cell endfeet (Fig. 6c). GFAP-expressing astrocytes were deprived of Nogo-A staining in the nerve fiber layer (NFL) whereas GS-containing Müller cell endfeet exhibited Nogo-A fluorescence (Fig. 6c). In DR retinae, Nogo-A signal was much brighter and colocalized with GS in the endfeet and the radial processes of Müller cell (Fig. 6d). In a severe case of cystoid macular edema (CME), GFAP and Nogo-A expression colocalized in gliotic Müller cells (Fig. 6e). These results suggest that neuronal and glial Nogo-A expression may influence the development of DR in patients.
Discussion
In this study, we observed the presence of Nogo-A in the mouse vitreous after NMDA-induced retinal injury. The vitreal elevation of Nogo-A occurred during inflammation characterized by TNFα secretion and retinal ganglion cell lysis. Strikingly, delayed injection of a function-blocking antibody directed against Nogo-A-Delta 20 significantly improved visual recovery. However, RGC survival was not influenced by this treatment. The analysis of inflammatory gene expression revealed strong and sustained downregulation of TNFα at the mRNA and protein levels in mice treated with 11C7. A pronounced decrease in TNFα expression was observed by immunofluorescence in microglia/macrophages and may result from cofilin inactivation. In parallel, P.Stat3 downregulation and P.Erk1/2 upregulation in Müller glia suggest that 11C7 attenuates gliosis as well. In general, this study shows that visual function improvement is associated with anti-inflammatory effects of Nogo-A-targeting antibody after retinal injury.
Retinal excitotoxicity increases vitreal Nogo-A proteins
In healthy conditions, Nogo-A is endogenously expressed in Müller cells and RGCs, but is weakly detectable in the vitreous. Following NMDA-induced injury, the level of Nogo-A proteins was markedly increased in the vitreous. Because Nogo-A is naturally enriched in the endoplasmic reticulum, we propose that vitreal elevation of Nogo-A may stem from RGC lysis, an event that was observed as early as 3 h post-NMDA injection. In contrast, other studies suggested that proteolytic degradation of Nogo-A promoted cell migration60 and axonal regeneration61. However, in these two last studies, growth activation was obtained in particular conditions, depending on the use of invasive glioblastoma cells60 and Schwann cells that stimulate axonal regeneration in the sciatic nerve61. It is conceivable that Nogo-A cleavage gives rise to the release of inhibitory fragments contributing to vision loss in the injured eye and that some growth-promoting treatments have the ability to inactivate them by alternative proteolysis. In the present study, vitreal Nogo-A was detected with 11C7, an antibody that selectively binds Delta 20 inhibitory domain16,62. In blocking experiments, 11C7 significantly increased visual function, suggesting that vitreal Nogo-A-Delta 20-containing proteins are active in inhibiting retinal neuron recovery. To our knowledge, these findings represent the first hint that active Nogo-A-Delta 20 can be released in biological fluids and diffuse in injured CNS tissues. Therefore, we wonder if the release of Nogo-A proteins also participate in the neurological alterations caused by brain injuries involving excitotoxicity such as cerebral stroke. Indeed, 11C7 can improve function recovery in stroke models23,24,25 in which massive neuronal necrosis produces tremendous inflammation mediated by TNFα63. In future studies, it will be important to fully evaluate the therapeutic potential of Nogo-A-neutralizing antibodies by determining if they can modulate neuroinflammation in stroke and spinal injury.
Subsequently to proteolytic cleavage, the fate of Nogo-A-Delta 20-containing proteins has not been addressed in our study. A previous study showed that recombinant Nogo-A-Delta 20 could activate RhoA signaling in neurons upon internalization, thereby inducing growth cone collapse in vitro64. Similarly in the retina, endocytosis of Nogo-A-Delta 20 in RGCs and its subsequent axonal transport in vesicles may lead to the inhibition of retinogeniculate terminal plasticity. This mechanism deserves to be tested in the injured visual system. It may allow to explain why the plasticity of RGC terminals is increased in the dorso lateral geniculate nucleus of Nogo-A KO mice after monocular deprivation, for example36. A similar mechanism may operate after retinal excitotoxicity.
Intraocular inhibition of Nogo-A with blocking antibody promotes visual recovery
Delayed blockade of Nogo-A with a single injection of neutralizing antibody was sufficient to promote visual function improvement after retinal injury. This is consistent with our previous results showing that Nogo-A gene deletion allowed better visual recovery in KO mice after NMDA-induced injury29. Based on previous observations, a participation of cortical Nogo-A in the restriction of vision recovery remains possible65. However, our study reveals that local expression of Nogo-A in the retina contributes to the development of visual deficits after retinal injury.
It is important to underscore the fact that visual improvement was only observed when RGC cell death was ~30% (0.5 nmol NMDA), but not when RGC loss reached ~70% (2 nmol NMDA). Of course, the effects of 11C7 on visual recovery may depend on the level of RGC survival. However, even after the elimination of ~70% of RGCs, a reduced but still measurable OKR was recorded. In this case, additional factors may explain the lack of OKR improvement with 11C7 treatment. In fact, contrary to what has been observed after the injection of 0.5 nmol of NMDA, retinal cell death is not limited to the ganglion cell layer after the delivery of 2 nmol of NMDA, but spread to amacrine cells in the ganglion cell layer and in the inner nuclear layer29. In particular, the loss of cholinergic amacrine cells called starburst amacrine cells may cause major OKR decrease. These cells are involved in motion detection and are essential to generate the optokinetic response66. Other neurons such as bipolar cells, involved in the production of the ERG b-wave, may be impaired by 2 nmol of NMDA. Indeed, at doses higher than 0.5 nmol, an important functional change associated with NMDA toxicity in the inner nuclear layer was the reduction of ERG b-wave amplitude29. In contrast, 0.5 nmol NMDA did not significantly influence ERG b-wave amplitudes compared with PBS injection (data not shown). The decrease in ERG b-wave amplitude noticed after 0.5 nmol NMDA and antibody injections is not the result of retinal damage in the inner nuclear layer but is rather attributable to the injection itself.
In addition, it is important to mention that the effect of 11C7 on visual function enhancement is not restricted to the optokinetic response, a reflexive neck movement induced by the accessory optic system in the brainstem. In a previous study, we found that intravitreally-delivered 11C7 also improved visual cortex response after NMDA-induced retinal excitotoxicity, as shown by the reduction of visual evoked potential latency29. Therefore, conscious and non-conscious visual functions may be improved by the blockade of retinal Nogo-A with 11C7 after ocular injury.
Switch in microglia and Müller glia reaction to injury
Our data showed that the reaction of microglia/macrophages and Müller cell are profoundly modified by 11C7. For microglia/macrophages, the most striking change was the downregulation of TNFα expression in injured retinae. The enhancement of TNFα expression in microglia is a major event controlling retinal excitotoxicity67. The elimination or the inhibition of microglia has been shown to prevent NMDA-induced TNFα upregulation in the retina and to protect RGCs from cell death67. Given the strong decrease in TNFα expression observed after 11C7 injection, Nogo-A-Delta 20 appears as a new potent modulator of TNFα expression in microglia. Moreover, the decrease of TNFα expression was correlated with cofilin inactivation by phosphorylation. The secretion of TNFα has been shown to be driven by cofilin activation/dephosphorylation in LPS-induced microglia activation52. In a similar fashion, 11C7 may reduce the level of TNFα by inactivating cofilin in microglia/macrophages in the retina. Along with TNFα, Sprr1a is the protein whose gene expression was the most downregulated by 11C7 at 7 days post-NMDA delivery. Interestingly, the expression of Sprr1a could be influenced by TNFα in inflammation50. It is thus tempting to propose that Nogo-A-Delta 20/P.cofilin/TNFα/Sprr1a may be a stress signaling pathway mediating chronic RGC dysfunction in the injured retina and that may be reversed by 11C7 treatment.
Following retinal injury, TNFα can exert rapid and delayed effects in the development of visual impairments, respectively by regulating RGC death46 and by causing oligodendrocyte and optic nerve axon degeneration51. Significant loss of axons and oligodendrocytes has been observed in the optic nerve 2 weeks after intravitreal injection of recombinant TNFα, whereas a significant decline in RGC number was only noticed after 2 months47,51. Visual function changes have not been followed in these studies. However, we believe that the late visual function improvement that arose at 2 weeks after NMDA injection (12 days after antibody injection) in 11C7-treated mice might result from TNFα downregulation. Unfortunately, in our study, immunofluorescent analysis of optic nerve axons and oligodendrocytes did not allow to find differences between mice receiving 11C7 and control antibody to support this hypothesis. Given the slow progression of axon/oligodendrocyte degeneration initiated by TNFα injections, the histological observations of optic nerves in our study may have been carried out too early (42 days post injury) to detect cellular damage. Alternatively, we propose that 11C7 may improve vision by preserving the integrity of optic nerve oligodendrocyte-axon contacts at the level of the Nodes of Ranvier. The maintenance of the Nodes of Ranvier in the optic nerve is crucial to ensure action potential conduction from the eye to visual brain regions and thus allow visual information integration. For example, when the Nodes of Ranvier are altered in the optic nerve after retinal ischemia, the optokinetic response is markedly impaired40. Interestingly, we have previously reported that intravitreal administration of 11C7 reduced visual evoked potential latency in the visual cortex after NMDA-induced excitotoxicity29. This observation may result from faster action potential transfer to brain targets. Since intravitreal injection of TNFα can trigger optic nerve demyelination68, 11C7-induced TNFα downregulation may lead to a better protection of myelin and the Nodes of Ranvier after excitotoxic injury. This possibility deserves to be addressed in future studies to clarify the mechanisms of action of 11C7 on visual recovery.
Therapeutic potential of Nogo-A-targeting antibodies in the treatment of retinal diseases
Collectively, the present study and others28,29 tend to suggest that Nogo-A may be a relevant molecular target to treat proliferative and non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Indeed, Nogo-A expression was dramatically increased in the retina and vitreous of donors with diabetic retinopathy (present study), 2) very similar retinal damages to those produced in our study with NMDA are thought to occur in diabetic retinopathy5,6,7,10. In addition, we have previously demonstrated that 11C7 strongly restricted retinal neovascularization in the model of oxygen-induced retinopathy28. Therefore, intravitreal injection of Nogo-A-blocking antibody may reduce neuronal dysfunction and may prevent pathological neovascularization, that are two hallmarks of diabetic retinopathy. In future studies, the effects of Nogo-A antibodies should be assessed in chronic models of diabetic retinopathy involving progressive loss of RGCs and depend on NMDAR activation2,3.
Conclusion
Our results demonstrate that intravitreal injection of anti-Nogo-A antibody can improve visual function and reduce microglia/macrophage-mediated inflammation after retinal injury. These data may be useful to develop new therapeutic approaches for diabetic retinopathy or neurodegenerative diseases with an important inflammatory component.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by grants from the Fonds de recherche du Québec-Santé (FRQS, grant# 30633 to V.P.), the Canadian Research Health Institutes (CIHR, grant# 407687 to V.P.), the Vision Health Research Network (VHRN, National and International Networking program, to V.P.) of the Fonds de recherche du Québec-Santé, the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI, project# 34204 to V.P.). We thank Prof. Martin E. Schwab (Univ of Zurich, Switzerland) for providing us with 11C7 antibody, Prof. Serge Rivest (Univ Laval, Canada) for sharing with us his confocal microscope and Prof. Emmanuel Planel and Prof. Sébastien Hébert (Univ Laval, Canada) for allowing us to use their fluorescent microscope and qRT-PCR machine.
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Baya Mdzomba, J., Joly, S., Rodriguez, L. et al. Nogo-A-targeting antibody promotes visual recovery and inhibits neuroinflammation after retinal injury. Cell Death Dis 11, 101 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-020-2302-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-020-2302-x
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