Jan Provis
澳大利亚国立大学
The macula is particularly vulnerable to degenerative disease,with age-related macular degeneration being the major cause of untreatable vision loss world-wide.Evidence also shows that improvements in the survival rates of infants of low and extremely low birth-weight results in increased incidence of poor visual outcomes in this group,including strabismus,amblyopia,poor contrast sensitivity and colour vision defects which are frequently associated with a small or absent foveal avascular area.Because the most popular animal models do not have a macula,knowledge of the normal biology of the macula and the genes that regulate its development,is generally lacking。
We compared gene expression in macular and non-macular regions of the human retina at 20 weeks'gestation,and identified~2000 differentially expressed candidate genes.Of these,two prominent clusters include genes with specific roles in axon/vascular guidance,and those with roles in the negative regulation of angiogenesis.Our findings suggest that genes associated with axonal and vascular guidance restrict vascularization of the macula and,in conjunction with anti-angiogenic factors,help to define the foveal avascular area. |