New research links obesity to blinding eye disease


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OBESITY-DRIVEN IMMUNE STRESS MAY TRIGGER INFLAMMATION LINKED TO AMD A new study from Canada, published in the renowned journal _Science_, has shed light on a potential molecular cause of


age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Research conducted at Hôpital Maisonneuve-Rosemont in Montreal has revealed how stressors of daily life, such as obesity, can alter the immune system


and cause harm to the eye as it ages. “We wanted to know why some people with a genetic predisposition develop AMD while others are spared,” said University of Montreal ophthalmology


professor Przemyslaw (Mike) Sapieha, who led the study with his postdoctoral fellow Dr. Masayuki Hata. “Although considerable effort has been invested in understanding the genes responsible


for AMD, variations, and mutations in susceptibility genes only increase the risk of developing the disease, but do not cause it,” Sapieha explained. “This observation suggests that we must


gain a better understanding of how other factors such as environment and lifestyle contribute to disease development.” AMD is a major cause of irreversible blindness worldwide and affected


approximately 196 million people in 2020. It comes in two forms: * dry AMD, characterized by the accumulation of fatty deposits at the back of the eye and the death of nerve cells in the


eye, * and wet AMD, which is characterized by diseased blood vessels that develop in the most sensitive part of the sight-generating tissue, called the macula. CONTACT WITH PATHOGENS It is


already known that the immune system in the eye of a person with AMD becomes dysregulated and aggressive. Normally, immune cells keep the eye healthy, but contact with pathogens such as


bacteria and viruses can make them go awry. At the same time, immune cells are also activated when the body is exposed to stressors such as excess fat in obesity, making being overweight the


number one non-genetic risk factor for developing AMD, after smoking. In their study, Sapieha and Hata used obesity as a model to accelerate and exaggerate the stressors experienced by the


body throughout life. PERSISTENT DNA CHANGES IN IMMUNE CELLS They found that transient obesity or a history of obesity leads to persistent changes in the DNA architecture within immune


cells, making them more susceptible to producing inflammatory molecules. “Our findings provide important information about the biology of the immune cells that cause AMD and will allow for


the development of more tailored treatments in the future,” said Hata, now an ophthalmology professor at Kyoto University, in Japan. The researchers hope their discovery will lead other


scientists to broaden their interest beyond obesity-related diseases to other diseases characterized by increased neuroinflammation, including Alzheimer’s disease and multiple sclerosis.


Reference: “Past history of obesity triggers persistent epigenetic changes in innate immunity and exacerbates neuroinflammation” by Masayuki Hata, Elisabeth M. M. A. Andriessen, Maki Hata,


Roberto Diaz-Marin, Frédérik Fournier, Sergio Crespo-Garcia, Guillaume Blot, Rachel Juneau, Frédérique Pilon, Agnieszka Dejda, Vera Guber, Emilie Heckel, Caroline Daneault, Virginie


Calderon, Christine Des Rosiers, Heather J. Melichar, Thomas Langmann, Jean-Sebastien Joyal, Ariel M. Wilson and Przemyslaw Sapieha, 5 January 2023, _Science_. DOI: 10.1126/science.abj8894


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