Omega-3 vetzuur tegen macula degeneratie.*
Uit een studie blijkt dat het omega-3 vetzuur DHA een belangrijke rol speelt ter voorkoming van ouderdomsschade aan het netvlies, zoals retinitis pigmentosa en macula degeneratie. De cellen in het pigmentblad van het netvlies zijn de beschermers van het netvlies. Tot nu toe was onduidelijk hoe deze cellen en daardoor de lichtgevoelige cellen zich tegen oxidatieschade, door bijv. licht, beschermden. Nu is door deze studie daar meer duidelijk in gekomen. Behalve antioxidanten zoals vitamine E blijkt nu dat het omega-3 vetzuur DHA een belangrijke rol speelt. In het antioxidatie proces blijkt dat een zenuwbeschermende stof, NPD1, aangemaakt wordt. Dit NPD1 gaat de oxidatieschade tegen. Hoe meer DHA nu in de cellen van het pigmentblad zit des te hoger is de synthese van dit NPD1.
Fish
Oil May Help Protect Against Retinal Degenerative Diseases
New
Orleans - A invited paper published in Trends in Neuroscience this week
by Nicolas G. Bazan, MD, PhD, Boyd Professor and Director of the Neuroscience
Center of Excellence at LSU Health Sciences Center in New Orleans, reports on
the role that the omega-3 fatty acids in fish oil play in protecting cells in
the retina from degenerative diseases like retinitis pigmentosa and age-related
macular degeneration, the leading cause of loss of vision in those older than
65. The paper is titled, Cell survival matters: docosahexaenoic acid
signaling, neuroprotection and photoreceptors.
In these blinding eye diseases, photoreceptor cells (rods and cones) degenerate
and die. Although this process can be triggered by many different things, one of
the most significant protective factors may be the close association of retinal
pigment epithelial (RPE) cells and the amount of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) in
them. The main role of RPE cells is photoreceptor maintenance-they conduct the
daily shedding, internalization, and degradation of the tips of the
photoreceptor outer segments. It now appears that RPE cells are also key to the
survival of photoreceptor cells.
Both photoreceptor and RPE cell types are normally exposed to potentially
damaging factors such as sunlight and high oxygen tension. How the cells avoid
damage from these factors and others has been a mystery, up to now. Dr. Bazan's
LSUHSC group, in close collaboration with colleagues at Harvard, has made
several key discoveries that are beginning to provide answers to this complex
riddle. One of them is the importance of DHA. RPE cells cope with sunlight and
oxidative stress, as well as trauma, by using antioxidants like Vitamin E,
present in the cells. Part of the RPE cells' response is to activate the
synthesis of a major neuroprotective compound, which Dr. Bazan and colleagues
discovered, called neuroprotectin D1 (NPD1). NPD1 inhibits genes causing
inflammation and cell death that oxidative stress and other triggers turn on.
RPE cells contain the omega-3 fatty acid family member, DHA, which Dr. Bazan and
colleagues found is a precursor to NPD1.
RPE cells regulate the uptake, conservation, and delivery of DHA to the
photoreceptor cells. DHA, known to be in short supply in patients with retinitis
pigmentosa and Usher's syndrome, promotes protective cell signaling by
facilitating the expression of helpful rather than destructive proteins as well
as stimulating the production of NPD1. DHA and NPD1 also decrease the production
of damaging free radicals. DHA has been shown by Dr. Bazan to promote survival
and inhibit cell death not only of photoreceptor cells, but also of neurons in
an experimental model of Alzheimer's disease.
Questions remain, including the identification of another receptor believed to
be an important pathway for NPD1, more information about the signals that
control the formation of NPD1, and if NPD1 or a synthetic counterpart might be
effective when administered therapeutically.
“Because the early clinical manifestations of most retinal degeneration
precedes massive photoreceptor cell death, it is important to define the initial
crucial events,” notes Dr. Bazan. “This knowledge might be applicable to the
design of novel therapeutic interventions to halt or slow disease progression.”
LSU Health Sciences Center at New Orleans
http://www.lsuhsc.edu
(april 2006)