Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, The Vanderbilt Eye Institute, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, 11435 MRB IV, 2215B Garland Avenue, Nashville, TN 37232, USA.
Prog Retin Eye Res. 2012 Nov;31(6):702-19. doi: 10.1016/j.preteyeres.2012.07.001. Epub 2012 Aug 1.
Glaucoma is a common optic neuropathy with a complex etiology often linked to sensitivity to intraocular pressure. Though the precise mechanisms that mediate or transduce this sensitivity are not clear, the axon of the retinal ganglion cell appears to be vulnerable to disease-relevant stressors early in progression. One reason may be because the axon is generally thin for both its unmyelinated and myelinated segment and much longer than the thicker unmyelinated axons of other excitatory retinal neurons. This difference may predispose the axon to metabolic and oxidative injury, especially at distal sites where pre-synaptic terminals form connections in the brain. This idea is consistent with observations of early loss of anterograde transport at central targets and other signs of distal axonopathy that accompany physiological indicators of progression. Outright degeneration of the optic projection ensues after a critical period and, at least in animal models, is highly sensitive to cumulative exposure to elevated pressure in the eye. Stress emanating from the optic nerve head can induce not only distal axonopathy with aspects of dying back neuropathy, but also Wallerian degeneration of the optic nerve and tract and a proximal program involving synaptic and dendritic pruning in the retina. Balance between progressive and acute mechanisms likely varies with the level of stress placed on the unmyelinated axon as it traverses the nerve head, with more acute insult pushing the system toward quicker disassembly. A constellation of signaling factors likely contribute to the transduction of stress to the axon, so that degenerative events along the length of the optic projection progress in retinotopic fashion. This pattern leads to well-defined sectors of functional depletion, even at distal-most sites in the pathway. While ganglion cell somatic drop-out is later in progression, some evidence suggests that synaptic and dendritic pruning in the retina may be a more dynamic process. Structural persistence both in the retina and in central projection sites offers the possibility that intrinsic self-repair pathways counter pathogenic mechanisms to delay as long as possible outright loss of tissue.
青光眼是一种常见的视神经病变,其病因复杂,通常与眼内压敏感有关。尽管介导或转导这种敏感性的确切机制尚不清楚,但视网膜神经节细胞的轴突似乎在疾病进展的早期就容易受到与疾病相关的应激源的影响。原因之一可能是因为轴突对于其未髓鞘化和髓鞘化的部分都很细,而且比其他兴奋性视网膜神经元的较粗的无髓鞘化轴突长得多。这种差异可能使轴突容易受到代谢和氧化损伤,尤其是在远端部位,那里的突触前末梢在大脑中形成连接。这一观点与中央靶标中顺行运输的早期丧失以及与进展相关的生理指标相伴的远端轴突病的其他迹象相一致。在关键时期之后,视神经投射会发生明显退化,至少在动物模型中,视神经投射对眼内压升高的累积暴露非常敏感。来自视神经头部的压力会导致不仅远端轴突病,还有视神经和束的沃勒氏变性以及涉及视网膜中突触和树突修剪的近端程序。渐进性和急性机制之间的平衡可能因未髓鞘化轴突在穿过神经头部时所承受的压力水平而异,更严重的损伤会促使系统更快地解体。一系列信号转导因子可能有助于将压力转导到轴突,从而使沿视神经投射的退行性事件以视网膜拓扑方式进展。这种模式导致功能耗竭的明确区域,即使在路径的最远端部位也是如此。虽然神经节细胞体细胞丢失发生在进展后期,但有证据表明,视网膜中的突触和树突修剪可能是一个更动态的过程。在视网膜和中枢投射部位的结构持续性为内在的自我修复途径提供了可能性,这些途径可以尽可能长时间地延迟组织的完全丧失。