Blasiak Janusz, Pawlowska Elzbieta, Helotera Hanna, Ionov Maksim, Derwich Marcin, Kaarniranta Kai
Faculty of Medicine, Collegium Medicum, Mazovian Academy in Plock, 09-402, Plock, Poland.
Department of Pediatric Dentistry, Medical University of Lodz, 92-217, Lodz, Poland.
Cell Mol Biol Lett. 2025 Apr 30;30(1):54. doi: 10.1186/s11658-025-00732-8.
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is an eye disease that can lead to legal blindness and vision loss. In its advanced stages, it is classified into dry and neovascular AMD. In neovascular AMD, the formation of new blood vessels disrupts the structure of the retina and induces an inflammatory response. Treatment for neovascular AMD involves antibodies and fusion proteins targeting vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGFA) and its receptors to inhibit neovascularization and slow vision loss. However, a fraction of patients with neovascular AMD do not respond to therapy. Many of these patients exhibit a subretinal fibrotic scar. Thus, retinal fibrosis may contribute to resistance against anti-VEGFA therapy and the cause of irreversible vision loss in neovascular AMD patients. Retinal pigment epithelium cells, choroidal fibroblasts, and retinal glial cells are crucial in the development of the fibrotic scar as they can undergo a mesenchymal transition mediated by transforming growth factor beta and other molecules, leading to their transdifferentiation into myofibroblasts, which are key players in subretinal fibrosis. Autophagy, a process that removes cellular debris and contributes to the pathogenesis of AMD, regardless of its type, may be stimulated by epithelial-mesenchymal transition and later inhibited. The mesenchymal transition of retinal cells and the dysfunction of the extracellular matrix-the two main aspects of fibrotic scar formation-are associated with impaired autophagy. Nonetheless, the causal relationship between autophagy and subretinal fibrosis remains unknown. This narrative/perspective review presents information on neovascular AMD, subretinal fibrosis, and autophagy, arguing that impaired autophagy may be significant for fibrosis-related resistance to anti-VEGFA therapy in neovascular AMD.
年龄相关性黄斑变性(AMD)是一种可导致法定失明和视力丧失的眼部疾病。在其晚期阶段,它被分为干性和新生血管性AMD。在新生血管性AMD中,新血管的形成破坏了视网膜结构并引发炎症反应。新生血管性AMD的治疗涉及靶向血管内皮生长因子A(VEGFA)及其受体的抗体和融合蛋白,以抑制新生血管形成并减缓视力丧失。然而,一部分新生血管性AMD患者对治疗无反应。这些患者中的许多人表现出视网膜下纤维化瘢痕。因此,视网膜纤维化可能导致对抗VEGFA治疗的抵抗,并成为新生血管性AMD患者不可逆视力丧失的原因。视网膜色素上皮细胞、脉络膜成纤维细胞和视网膜神经胶质细胞在纤维化瘢痕的形成中至关重要,因为它们可以经历由转化生长因子β和其他分子介导的间充质转变,导致它们转分化为肌成纤维细胞,而肌成纤维细胞是视网膜下纤维化的关键因素。自噬是一个清除细胞碎片并参与AMD发病机制的过程,无论其类型如何,它可能受到上皮-间充质转变的刺激,随后受到抑制。视网膜细胞的间充质转变和细胞外基质功能障碍——纤维化瘢痕形成的两个主要方面——与自噬受损有关。尽管如此,自噬与视网膜下纤维化之间的因果关系仍然未知。这篇叙述性/观点性综述介绍了有关新生血管性AMD、视网膜下纤维化和自噬的信息,认为自噬受损可能对新生血管性AMD中与纤维化相关的抗VEGFA治疗抵抗具有重要意义。