Purinergic Signaling in the Retina: From Development to Disease

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ATP
Adenosine
Nucleotides
P1 receptors
P2 receptors
Retina diseases
Adenosine
Adenosine Triphosphate
Animals
Cell Death
Cell Differentiation
Humans
Purines
Receptors
Purinergic
Receptors
Purinergic P2X
Receptors
Purinergic P2Y
Retina
Signal Transduction
adenosine
adenosine receptor
adenosine triphosphate
cytokine
glutamic acid
growth factor
purine derivative
purinergic P2X receptor
purinergic P2Y receptor
purinergic receptor
adenosine
adenosine triphosphate
purine
purine derivative
purinergic P2X receptor
purinergic P2Y receptor
purinergic receptor
cell death
cell migration
cell proliferation
cell survival
diabetic retinopathy
excitotoxicity
glaucoma
glia
human
intracellular signaling
nonhuman
optic nerve injury
priority journal
retina cell
retina development
retina disease
retina ischemia
retinal pigment epithelium
Review
signal transduction
tissue regeneration
zebra fish
animal
cell differentiation
metabolism
pathology
physiology
retina
signal transduction.
Dentistry

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Abstract

Retinal injuries and diseases are major causes of human disability involving vision impairment by the progressive and permanent loss of retinal neurons. During development, assembly of this tissue entails a successive and overlapping, signal-regulated engagement of complex events that include proliferation of progenitors, neurogenesis, cell death, neurochemical differentiation and synaptogenesis. During retinal damage, several of these events are re-activated with both protective and detrimental consequences. Purines and pyrimidines, along with their metabolites are emerging as important molecules regulating both retinal development and the tissue's responses to damage. The present review provides an overview of the purinergic signaling in the developing and injured retina. Recent findings on the presence of vesicular and channel-mediated ATP release by retinal and retinal pigment epithelial cells, adenosine synthesis and release, expression of receptors and intracellular signaling pathways activated by purinergic signaling in retinal cells are reported. The pathways by which purinergic receptors modulate retinal cell proliferation, migration and death of retinal cells during development and injury are summarized. The contribution of nucleotides to the self-repair of the injured zebrafish retina is also discussed. © 2018 Elsevier Inc.

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2019-09-01

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Brain Research Bulletin

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Brain Research Bulletin not open access. Uploaded pdf from PubMed Central. PMCID: PMC6525091

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