Age-related
decrease of potassium currents in glial (Müller) cells of the human
retina
Andreas Bringmann,* PhD; Leon Kohen,* MD; Sebastian Wolf,* MD; Peter
Wiedemann,* MD;
Andreas Reichenbach,† PhD
ABSTRACT
Background:
Age-dependent alterations have been investigated far less in retinal
glial cells than in retinal neurons. We investigated age-dependent alterations
of inwardly rectifying potassium (Kir) currents in Müller glial
cells of the human retina.
Methods: Müller
cells were isolated immediately post mortem from donors without a reported
history of eye disease, and the amplitudes of Kir currents and of currents
through high-voltage-activated (HVA) calcium channels were measured
by whole-cell patch clamping.
Results:
The amplitude of the Kir currents
was lower in the cells from donors older than 50 years than in the cells
of younger donors; the decrease was strongly correlated with the donor’s
age (p < 0.001). The current amplitude in the cells from donors older
than 60 years was about 40% lower than the amplitude in the cells from
donors younger than 50 years. The amplitude of the HVA currents was
greater in the cells from donors older than 55 years than in the cells
from younger donors; the increase, up to about 500%, was strongly age-dependent
(p < 0.001).
Interpretation:
The age-related decrease
in Kir-current amplitude in Müller cells may reflect the neuron
loss in the aged retina. Our findings also indicate that retinal glial
cells have enhanced cytoplasmic calcium signals in the course of aging.
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