๐Ÿ‘ค Frans Vinberg

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Silke Becker, Lara S Carroll, Frans Vinberg ยท 2020 ยท BMJ open diabetes research & care ยท added 2026-04-24
Diabetic retinopathy is a major complication of diabetes recently associated with compromised photoreceptor function. Multiple stressors in diabetes, such as hyperglycemia, oxidative stress and inflam Show more
Diabetic retinopathy is a major complication of diabetes recently associated with compromised photoreceptor function. Multiple stressors in diabetes, such as hyperglycemia, oxidative stress and inflammatory factors, have been identified, but systemic effects of diabetes on outer retina function are incompletely understood. We assessed photoreceptor physiology in vivo and in isolated retinas to better understand how alterations in the cellular environment compared with intrinsic cellular/molecular properties of the photoreceptors, affect light signal transduction and transmission in the retina in chronic type 2 diabetes. Photoreceptor function was assessed in BKS.Cs-Dock7 We found that both transduction and transmission of light signals by rod photoreceptors were compromised in 6-month-old (n=9-10 eyes from 5 animals, ***p<0.001) but not in 3-month-old diabetic mice in vivo (n=4-8 eyes from 2 to 4 animals). In contrast, rod signaling was similar in isolated retinas from 6-month-old control and diabetic mice under normoglycemic conditions (n=11). Acutely elevated glucose ex vivo increased light-evoked rod photoreceptor responses in control mice (n=11, ***p<0.001), but did not affect light responses in diabetic mice (n=11). Our data suggest that long-term diabetes does not irreversibly change the ability of rod photoreceptors to transduce and mediate light signals. However, type 2 diabetes appears to induce adaptational changes in the rods that render them less sensitive to increased availability of glucose. Show less
๐Ÿ“„ PDF DOI: 10.1136/bmjdrc-2020-001571
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