An ocular glymphatic clearance system removes β-amyloid from the rodent eye

Xiaowei Wang(University of Copenhagen), Nanhong Lou(University of Rochester Medical Center), Allison Eberhardt(University of Rochester Medical Center), Yujia Yang(Berkeley Eye Center), Peter Kusk(University of Copenhagen), Qiwu Xu(University of Rochester Medical Center), Benjamín Förstera(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Sisi Peng(University of Rochester Medical Center), Meng Shi(Berkeley Eye Center), Antonio Ladrón-de-Guevara(University of Rochester Medical Center), Christine Delle(University of Copenhagen), Björn Sigurðsson(University of Copenhagen), Anna L. R. Xavier(University of Copenhagen), Ali Ertürk(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Richard T. Libby(University of Rochester Medical Center), Lu Chen(Berkeley Eye Center), Alexander S. Thrane(University of Copenhagen), Maiken Nedergaard(University of Copenhagen)
Science Translational Medicine
March 25, 2020
Cited by 234Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Despite high metabolic activity, the retina and optic nerve head lack traditional lymphatic drainage. We here identified an ocular glymphatic clearance route for fluid and wastes via the proximal optic nerve in rodents. β-amyloid (Aβ) was cleared from the retina and vitreous via a pathway dependent on glial water channel aquaporin-4 (AQP4) and driven by the ocular-cranial pressure difference. After traversing the lamina barrier, intra-axonal Aβ was cleared via the perivenous space and subsequently drained to lymphatic vessels. Light-induced pupil constriction enhanced efflux, whereas atropine or raising intracranial pressure blocked efflux. In two distinct murine models of glaucoma, Aβ leaked from the eye via defects in the lamina barrier instead of directional axonal efflux. The results suggest that, in rodents, the removal of fluid and metabolites from the intraocular space occurs through a glymphatic pathway that might be impaired in glaucoma.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis