AMP-activated-kinase (AMPK) is essential sensor and metabolic regulator of retinal neurons and their integrated metabolism with RPE.

Published: May 25, 2020, 7 p.m.

Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.05.22.109165v1?rss=1 Authors: Xu, L., Brown, E. E., Keuthan, C. J., Gubbi, H., Swaroop, A., Grellier, E.-K., Roger, J. E., Du, J., Ash, J. D. Abstract: The retina has one of the highest energy demands in the human body, and proper regulation of metabolism among the cell types of the retina is required for functional vision. Recent studies have reported that retinal metabolism is disrupted during retinal degeneration and aging, while therapies designed to enhance metabolism can slow or prevent degeneration. Here, we show that multiple metabolic pathways, including those regulated by a key ATP sensor and regulator of metabolism, AMP-activated-kinase (AMPK), were dysregulated in a model of inherited retinal degeneration. In order to assess the direct role of AMPK in regulating retinal metabolism, we used mice with retina-specific knockout of AMPK activity. Conditional loss of AMPK resulted in impaired visual function at an early age, with slow photoreceptor loss observed in older mice. Moreover, we found that loss of AMPK resulted in decreased metabolic flux from glucose, decreased mitochondrial DNA copy number, decreased mitochondrial-related gene expression, and alterations in mitochondrial morphology in the photoreceptors, all of which preceded degeneration. Surprisingly, metabolic changes from the loss of AMPK in retinal neurons also resulted in secondary degeneration of retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells. Together, these data show that AMPK signaling is important for maintaining metabolic homeostasis of the retina and support the hypothesis that photoreceptors and RPE have a shared metabolic ecosystem that is controlled, in part, by AMPK. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info