Alistair J. Barber
Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Alistair J. Barber.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1998
Alistair J. Barber; Erich Lieth; Sonny Khin; David A. Antonetti; Adam G. Buchanan; Thomas W. Gardner
This study determined whether retinal degeneration during diabetes includes retinal neural cell apoptosis. Image analysis of retinal sections from streptozotocin (STZ) diabetic rats after 7.5 months of STZ diabetes identified 22% and 14% reductions in the thickness of the inner plexiform and inner nuclear layers, respectively (P < 0. 001). The number of surviving ganglion cells was also reduced by 10% compared to controls (P < 0.001). In situ end labeling of DNA terminal dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) identified a 10-fold increase in the frequency of retinal apoptosis in whole-mounted rat retinas after 1, 3, 6, and 12 months of diabetes (P < 0.001, P < 0. 001, P < 0.01, and P < 0.01, respectively). Most TUNEL-positive cells were not associated with blood vessels and did not colocalize with the endothelial cell-specific antigen, von Willebrand factor. Insulin implants significantly reduced the number of TUNEL-positive cells (P < 0.05). The number of TUNEL-positive cells was also increased in retinas from humans with diabetes. These data indicate that retinal neural cell death occurs early in diabetes. This is the first quantitative report of an increase in neural cell apoptosis in the retina during diabetes, and indicates that neurodegeneration is an important component of diabetic retinopathy.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
David A. Antonetti; Alistair J. Barber; Leigh Ann Hollinger; Ellen B. Wolpert; Thomas W. Gardner
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) may have a physiologic role in regulating vessel permeability and contributes to the pathophysiology of diabetic retinopathy as well as tumor development. We set out to ascertain the mechanism by which VEGF regulates paracellular permeability in rats. Intra-ocular injection of VEGF caused a post-translational modification of occludin as determined by a gel shift from 60 to 62 kDa. This event began by 15 min post-injection and was maximal by 45 min. Alkaline phosphatase treatment revealed this modification was caused by a change in occludin phosphorylation. In addition, the quantity of extracted occludin increased 2-fold in the same time frame. The phosphorylation and increased extraction of occludin was recapitulated in retinal endothelial cells in culture after VEGF stimulation. The data presented herein are the first demonstration of a change in the phosphorylation of this transmembrane protein under conditions of increased endothelial permeability. In addition, intra-ocular injection of VEGF also caused tyrosine phosphorylation of ZO-1 as early as 15 min and increased phosphorylation 4-fold after 90 min. In conclusion, VEGF rapidly increases occludin phosphorylation as well as the tyrosine phosphorylation of ZO-1. Phosphorylation of occludin and ZO-1 likely contribute to regulated endothelial paracellular permeability.
Diabetes | 2006
David A. Antonetti; Alistair J. Barber; Sarah K. Bronson; Willard M. Freeman; Thomas W. Gardner; Leonard S. Jefferson; Mark Kester; Scot R. Kimball; J. Kyle Krady; Kathryn F. LaNoue; Christopher C. Norbury; Patrick G. Quinn; Lakshman Sandirasegarane; Ian A. Simpson
Diabetic retinopathy remains a frightening prospect to patients and frustrates physicians. Destruction of damaged retina by photocoagulation remains the primary treatment nearly 50 years after its introduction. The diabetes pandemic requires new approaches to understand the pathophysiology and improve the detection, prevention, and treatment of retinopathy. This perspective considers how the unique anatomy and physiology of the retina may predispose it to the metabolic stresses of diabetes. The roles of neural retinal alterations and impaired retinal insulin action in the pathogenesis of early retinopathy and the mechanisms of vision loss are emphasized. Potential means to overcome limitations of current animal models and diagnostic testing are also presented with the goal of accelerating therapies to manage retinopathy in the face of ongoing diabetes.
Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2003
Alistair J. Barber
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a common complication of diabetes and a leading cause of legal blindness in working-age adults. The clinical hallmarks of DR include increased vascular permeability, leading to edema, and endothelial cell proliferation. Much of the research effort has been focused on vascular changes, but it is becoming apparent that other degenerative changes occur beyond the vascular cells of the retina. These include increased apoptosis, glial cell reactivity, microglial activation, and altered glutamate metabolism. When occurring together, these changes may be considered as neurodegenerative and could explain some of the functional deficits in vision that begin soon after the onset of diabetes. This review will present the current evidence that neurodegeneration of the retina is a critical component of DR. There are two basic hypotheses that account for loss of cells in the neural retina. First, the loss of blood-retinal barrier integrity, which initially manifests as an increase in vascular permeability, causes a failure to control the composition of the extracellular fluid in the retina, which in turn leads to edema and neuronal cell loss. Alternatively, diabetes has a direct effect on metabolism within the neural retina, leading to an increase in apoptosis, which in turn causes breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier. It is not clear which hypothesis will be found to be correct, and, in fact, it is likely that vascular permeability and neuronal apoptosis are closely linked components of DR. However, the gradual loss of neurons suggests that progress of the disease is ultimately irreversible, since these cells cannot usually be replaced. In light of this possibility, new treatments for DR should be preventive in nature, being implemented before overt clinical symptoms develop. While vascular permeability is the target that is primarily considered for new treatments of DR, evidence presented here suggests that apoptosis of neurons is also an essential target for pharmacological studies. The vision of people with diabetes will be protected only when we have discovered a means to prevent the gradual but constant loss of neurons within the inner retina.
Survey of Ophthalmology | 2002
Thomas W. Gardner; David A. Antonetti; Alistair J. Barber; Kathryn F. LaNoue; Steven W. Levison
Retinal microvascular dysfunction in diabetes is a major component of diabetic retinopathy. This review highlights recent observations regarding the cellular anatomy that contributes to the blood-retinal barrier and its breakdown, the alterations of macroglial, neuronal, and microglial cells in diabetes, and how these changes lead to loss of vision. In addition, the effects of systemic pathophysiologic influences, including metabolic control, blood pressure, and fluid volume on the formation of diabetic macular edema are discussed. Finally, an overview of inflammatory mechanisms and responses in the retina in diabetes is provided. Together, these new observations provide a broader clinical and research perspective on diabetic retinal vascular dysfunction than previously considered, and provide new avenues for improved treatments to prevent loss of vision.
The Journal of Physiology | 2008
Timothy S. Kern; Alistair J. Barber
Diabetic retinopathy has long been recognized as a vascular disease that develops in most patients, and it was believed that the visual dysfunction that develops in some diabetics was due to the vascular lesions used to characterize the disease. It is becoming increasingly clear that neuronal cells of the retina also are affected by diabetes, resulting in dysfunction and even degeneration of some neuronal cells. Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) are the best studied of the retinal neurons with respect to the effect of diabetes. Although investigations are providing new information about RGCs in diabetes, including therapies to inhibit the neurodegeneration, critical information about the function, anatomy and response properties of these cells is yet needed to understand the relationship between RGC changes and visual dysfunction in diabetes.
Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology | 2000
Erich Lieth; Thomas W. Gardner; Alistair J. Barber; David A. Antonetti
Normal vision depends on the normal function of retinal neurons, so vision loss in diabetes must ultimately be explained in terms of altered neuronal function. However, to date relatively little attention has been paid to the impact of diabetes on the neural retina. Instead, the focus of most research has been primarily on retinal vascular changes, with the assumption that they cause altered neuronal function and consequently vision loss. An increasing body of evidence suggests that alterations in neuronal function and viability may contribute to the pathogenic mechanisms of diabetic retinopathy beginning shortly after the onset of diabetes. This view arises from neurophysiological, psychometric, histopathological and biochemical observations in humans and experimental animals. The collective evidence from past and recent studies supports the hypothesis that neurodegeneration, together with functional changes in the vasculature, is an important component of diabetic retinopathy. The authors invite other investigators to include the neural retina as a component of their studies so that the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy can be understood more clearly.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011
Alistair J. Barber; Thomas W. Gardner; Steven F. Abcouwer
The most striking features of diabetic retinopathy are the vascular abnormalities that are apparent by fundus examination. There is also strong evidence that diabetes causes apoptosis of neural and vascular cells in the retina. Thus, there is good reason to define diabetic retinopathy as a form of chronic neurovascular degeneration. In keeping with the gradual onset of retinopathy in humans, the rate of cell loss in the animal models is insidious, even in uncontrolled diabetes. This is not surprising given that a sustained high rate of cell loss without regeneration would soon lead to catastrophic tissue destruction. The consequences of ongoing cell death are difficult to detect, and even the quantification of cumulative cell loss requires painstaking histology and microscopy. This subtle cell loss raises the issue of the relevance of the phenomenon to the progression of diabetic retinopathy and the ultimate loss of vision. Neuronal function may be compromised in advance of apoptosis, contributing to an early deterioration of vision. Here we review some of the evidence supporting apoptotic cell death as a contributing mechanism of diabetic retinopathy, explore some of the potential causes, and discuss the potential links between apoptosis and loss of visual function in diabetic retinopathy.
Seminars in Ophthalmology | 1999
David A. Antonetti; Erich Lieth; Alistair J. Barber; Thomas W. Gardner
Diabetes leads to a wide array of complications in humans, including kidney failure, vascular disease, peripheral nerve degeneration, and vision loss. Diabetic retinopathy causes blindness in more working-age people in the United States than any other disease and contributes greatly to blindness in the young and old as well. The increasing rate of diabetes occurring in our society can only bring about a further decrease in the visual health of this country unless new modalities are discovered to prevent and cure diabetic retinopathy. Breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier and the resultant vascular permeability remains one of the first observable alterations in diabetic retinopathy and strongly correlates with vision loss. In this article, we examine the molecular components that form this blood-retinal barrier and explore how changes in the production of growth factors in the neural parenchyma cause an increase in vascular permeability and contribute to retinal degeneration.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2008
Matthew J. Gastinger; Allen R. Kunselman; Erin E. Conboy; Sarah K. Bronson; Alistair J. Barber
PURPOSE To determine the extent of retinal ganglion cell loss and morphologic abnormalities in surviving ganglion cells in Ins2 Akita/+ diabetic mice. METHODS Mice that expressed cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) or yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) reporter genes under the transcriptional control of the Thy1 promoter were crossed with Ins2 Akita/+ mice. After 3 months of diabetes, the number and morphology of retinal ganglion cells was analyzed by confocal microscopy. The number of CFP-positive retinal ganglion cells was quantified in retinas of Ins2(Akita/+) Thy1-CFP mice. The morphology of surviving cells was examined, and dendritic density was quantified in Ins2 Akita/+ Thy1-YFP mice by using the Sholl analysis. RESULTS Thy1-CFP expression was limited to retinal ganglion cell bodies. There was a 16.4% reduction in the density of CFP-positive ganglion cells in the peripheral retina of Ins2 Akita/+ mice compared with wild-type control retinas (P < 0.017), but no significant change in the central retina. Thy1-YFP expression occurred throughout the entire structure of a smaller number of cells, including their soma, axons, and dendrites. Six different morphologic clusters of cells were identified in the mouse retinas. The structure of dendrites of ON-type retinal ganglion cells was affected by diabetes, having 32.4% more dendritic terminals (P < 0.05), 18.6% increase in total dendrite length (P < 0.05), and 15.3% greater dendritic density compared with control retinas, measured by Scholl analysis. Abnormal swelling on somas, axons, and dendrites were noted in all subtypes of ganglion cells including those expressing melanopsin. CONCLUSIONS The data show that retinal ganglion cells are lost from the peripheral retina of mice within the first 3 months of diabetes and that the dendrites of surviving large ON-type cells undergo morphologic changes. These abnormalities may explain some of the early anomalies in visual function induced by diabetes.