1. Immune-Mediated Retinal Vasculitis in Posterior Uveitis and Experimental Models: The Leukotriene (LT)B4-VEGF Axis.
- Author
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Eskandarpour M, Nunn MA, Weston-Davies W, and Calder VL
- Subjects
- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Humans, Receptors, Leukotriene B4 immunology, Retinal Vasculitis immunology, Uveitis drug therapy, Uveitis immunology, Inflammation drug therapy, Receptors, Leukotriene B4 metabolism, Retinal Vasculitis metabolism, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A metabolism
- Abstract
Retinal vascular diseases have distinct, complex and multifactorial pathogeneses yet share several key pathophysiological aspects including inflammation, vascular permeability and neovascularisation. In non-infectious posterior uveitis (NIU), retinal vasculitis involves vessel leakage leading to retinal enlargement, exudation, and macular oedema. Neovascularisation is not a common feature in NIU, however, detection of the major angiogenic factor-vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A)-in intraocular fluids in animal models of uveitis may be an indication for a role for this cytokine in a highly inflammatory condition. Suppression of VEGF-A by directly targeting the leukotriene B4 (LTB4) receptor (BLT1) pathway indicates a connection between leukotrienes (LTs), which have prominent roles in initiating and propagating inflammatory responses, and VEGF-A in retinal inflammatory diseases. Further research is needed to understand how LTs interact with intraocular cytokines in retinal inflammatory diseases to guide the development of novel therapeutic approaches targeting both inflammatory mediator pathways.
- Published
- 2021
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