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A Canadian study published in the journal Science elucidates a new molecular mechanism
that may lead to age-related macular degeneration (AMD).
Research by the University of Montreal's Maisonneuve-Rosement Hospital shows that life stressors such as obesity reprogram immune system cells and cause damage
to the eyes as they age.
Przemyslaw (Mike) Sapieha, a professor of ophthalmology at the University of Montreal, said: "We wanted to know why some people with a genetic predisposition develop AMD and others do not
.
" His postdoctoral researcher, Dr.
Masayuki Hata, was also involved in the study
.
Sapieha explains: "Although scientists have put considerable effort into understanding the genes that cause AMD, variations and mutations in susceptibility genes only increase the risk of developing this disease, not cause it
.
"
"This observation suggests that we must better understand how other factors, such as environment and lifestyle, contribute to the development of
the disease.
"
AMD macular degeneration is the leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide, affecting
approximately 196 million people by 2020.
It comes in two forms:
dry macular degeneration, characterized by fat accumulation at the back of the eye and death of nerve cells within the eye,
Wet macular degeneration, characterized by the most sensitive part of the tissues that produce vision, the macula – is the blood vessels
that cause lesions.
Contact with pathogens
The immune system in the eyes of AMD patients is known to become dysfunctional and aggressive
.
Normally, immune cells keep eyes healthy, but contact with pathogens such as bacteria and viruses can make them go wrong
.
At the same time, immune cells are also activated when the body is exposed to stressors, such as excess fat in obesity, making overweight the number one non-genetic risk factor for AMD, second only to smoking
.
In the latest study, Sapieha and Hata used obesity as a model to accelerate and exaggerate the stress
the body experiences over a lifetime.
They found that transient obesity, or a history of obesity, led to persistent changes in the structure of DNA within immune cells, making them more susceptible to inflammatory molecules
.
"Our findings provide important information about the immune cell biology that causes AMD and will allow for the development of more targeted therapies in the future," Hata said
.
The researchers hope their findings will lead other scientists to expand their interest beyond obesity-related diseases to other diseases characterized by increased neuroinflammation, including Alzheimer's disease and multiple sclerosis
.
Past history of obesity triggers persistent epigenetic changes in innate immunity and exacerbates neuroinflammation