RESUMO
Retinal function changes dramatically from day to night, yet clinical diagnosis, treatments, and experimental sampling occur during the day. To begin to address this gap in our understanding of disease pathobiology, this study investigates whether diabetes affects the retina's daily rhythm of gene expression. Diabetic, Ins2Akita/J mice, and non-diabetic littermates were kept under a 12 h:12 h light/dark cycle until 4 months of age. mRNA sequencing was conducted in retinas collected every 4 h throughout the 24 hr light/dark cycle. Computational approaches were used to detect rhythmicity, predict acrophase, identify differential rhythmic patterns, analyze phase set enrichment, and predict upstream regulators. The retinal transcriptome exhibited a tightly regulated rhythmic expression with a clear 12-hr transcriptional axis. Day-peaking genes were enriched for DNA repair, RNA splicing, and ribosomal protein synthesis, night-peaking genes for metabolic processes and growth factor signaling. Although the 12-hr transcriptional axis is retained in the diabetic retina, it is phase advanced for some genes. Upstream regulator analysis for the phase-shifted genes identified oxygen-sensing mechanisms and HIF1alpha, but not the circadian clock, which remained in phase with the light/dark cycle. We propose a model in which, early in diabetes, the retina is subjected to an internal desynchrony with the circadian clock and its outputs are still light-entrained whereas metabolic pathways related to neuronal dysfunction and hypoxia are phase advanced. Further studies are now required to evaluate the chronic implications of such desynchronization on the development of diabetic retinopathy.
Assuntos
Diabetes Mellitus , Retinopatia Diabética , Camundongos , Animais , Ritmo Circadiano/genética , Transcriptoma , Retina/metabolismo , Retinopatia Diabética/genética , Retinopatia Diabética/metabolismo , FotoperíodoRESUMO
Receptors implicated in cough hypersensitivity are transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1), transient receptor potential cation channel, Subfamily A, Member 1 (TRPA1) and acid sensing ion channel receptor 3 (ASIC3). Respiratory viruses, such as respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and measles virus (MV) may interact directly and/or indirectly with these receptors on sensory nerves and epithelial cells in the airways. We used in vitro models of sensory neurones (SHSY5Y or differentiated IMR-32 cells) and human bronchial epithelium (BEAS-2B cells) as well as primary human bronchial epithelial cells (PBEC) to study the effect of MV and RSV infection on receptor expression. Receptor mRNA and protein levels were examined by qPCR and flow cytometry, respectively, following infection or treatment with UV inactivated virus, virus-induced soluble factors or pelleted virus. Concentrations of a range of cytokines in resultant BEAS-2B and PBEC supernatants were determined by ELISA. Up-regulation of TRPV1, TRPA1 and ASICS3 expression occurred by 12 hours post-infection in each cell type. This was independent of replicating virus, within the same cell, as virus-induced soluble factors alone were sufficient to increase channel expression. IL-8 and IL-6 increased in infected cell supernatants. Antibodies against these factors inhibited TRP receptor up-regulation. Capsazepine treatment inhibited virus induced up-regulation of TRPV1 indicating that these receptors are targets for treating virus-induced cough.