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Ceramide Induces the Death of Retina Photoreceptors Through Activation of Parthanatos.

Molecular Neurobiology 2018 November 2
Ceramide (Cer) has a key role inducing cell death and has been proposed as a messenger in photoreceptor cell death in the retina. Here, we explored the pathways induced by C2 -acetylsphingosine (C2 -Cer), a cell-permeable Cer, to elicit photoreceptor death. Treating pure retina neuronal cultures with 10 μM C2 -Cer for 6 h selectively induced photoreceptor death, decreasing mitochondrial membrane potential and increasing the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). In contrast, amacrine neurons preserved their viability. Noteworthy, the amount of TUNEL-labeled cells and photoreceptors expressing cleaved caspase-3 remained constant and pretreatment with a pan-caspase inhibitor did not prevent C2 -Cer-induced death. C2 -Cer provoked polyADP ribosyl polymerase-1 (PARP-1) overactivation. Inhibiting PARP-1 decreased C2 -Cer-induced photoreceptor death; C2 -Cer increased polyADP ribose polymer (PAR) levels and induced the translocation of apoptosis inducing factor (AIF) from mitochondria to photoreceptor nuclei, which was prevented by PARP-1 inhibition. Pretreatment with a calpain and cathepsin inhibitor and with a calpain inhibitor reduced photoreceptor death, whereas selective cathepsin inhibitors granted no protection. Combined pretreatment with a PARP-1 and a calpain inhibitor evidenced the same protection as each inhibitor by itself. Neither autophagy nor necroptosis was involved in C2 -Cer-elicited death; no increase in LDH release was observed upon C2 -Cer treatment and pretreatment with inhibitors of necroptosis and autophagy did not rescue photoreceptors. These results suggest that C2 -Cer induced photoreceptor death by a novel, caspase-independent mechanism, involving activation of PARP-1, decline of mitochondrial membrane potential, calpain activation, and AIF translocation, all of which are biochemical features of parthanatos.

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