Welcome To The Ultimate Eyecare Blog.

This blog has been specifically set up to allow people to readily access the up to date eyecare information. Allowing you to pick the brains of eyecare professionals.
Remember, this blog is free, no registration, no login and everyone is welcome to participate.
And dont forget to leave a comment and contribute to some lively eye chat!

Thank you for your valued time. Enjoy.

15 Dec 2007

Blind Mice Shed Light On Human retinitis pigmentosa

"Mutant mice could provide genetic clues to understanding incurable human sight loss resulting from retinal degeneration. New research uncovers a role for microRNA in retinal disease, and may point the way to future therapies.

A team from the Trinity College Dublin and the Sanger Institute, Cambridge (UK), led by Dr Arpad Palfi and Dr Jane Farrar of the Smurfit Institute of Genetics, Trinity College Dublin used mutant mice that model the human eye disease retinitis pigmentosa (RP).
The researchers compared these mice with wild-type mice, testing their hypothesis that changes in microRNA expression may be evident in retinal degeneration.
The team found very similar patterns of microRNA expression in retinas of two wild-type mouse strains, but, microarray profiling revealed that in these wildtype mice the patterns of microRNA expression differed between the brain and retina. Furthermore, there were clear differences in the microRNA expression patterns between wild type and mutant mice. The researchers found alterations greater than two-fold in the expression of 9 microRNAs in mutant mouse retinas compared with those of the wild-type mice. These microRNAs potentially regulate genes implicated in retinal diseases and genes encoding components involved in cell death and intracellular trafficking.
The results from the study suggest that miRNA expression is perturbed during retinal degeneration" says Dr Jane Farrar of Trinity College Dublin. "Modulation of expression of retinal microRNAs may possibly represent a future therapeutic strategy for retinopathies such as retinitis pigmentosa."

No comments: