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2026-06-24 PubMed

Immunoproteasome inhibition protects retinal pigment epithelium from Aβ-induced degeneration via TNFα-NLRP3 pathway.

Immunoproteasome inhibition protects the retina from Alzheimer's-associated degeneration.

Background

The retina, particularly the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), is significantly affected in Alzheimer's disease (AD), exhibiting degeneration alongside cognitive decline. A key driver of AD pathology is the accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ) peptides, which trigger chronic inflammation. This inflammation activates the immunoproteasome (iP), largely mediated by tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα) secreted from glial cells. While iP inhibition has shown promise in protecting against retinal damage, the precise molecular mechanisms linking Aβ, inflammation, and RPE degeneration remained unclear, representing a critical gap in understanding and therapeutic targeting.

Study Design

Researchers investigated the signaling cascade between glial cells and RPE cells in response to Aβ stimulation in an in vitro model. They exposed Müller glia and RPE cells to Aβ and measured TNFα secretion. The study then explored the effects of immunoproteasome inhibition on TNFα release from glial cells. Furthermore, they assessed the impact of neutralizing glia-derived TNFα on iP activity and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in RPE cells. The primary endpoints included TNFα secretion, iP activation, NLRP3 inflammasome upregulation, and EMT markers in RPE cells.

Results

Aβ stimulation initiated a critical signaling cascade from glia to RPE cells. Exposure to significantly increased TNFα secretion in Müller glia, while RPE cells showed only a minimal intrinsic TNFα response to Aβ. Inhibition of the immunoproteasome (iP) effectively reduced TNFα release from glial cells, highlighting its role in inflammatory signaling. Crucially, neutralizing glia-derived TNFα led to a decrease in iP activity and mitigated epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in RPE cells. This demonstrates the central role of TNFα in glial-induced retinal inflammation and RPE degeneration. The findings strongly position glia-derived TNFα as a key mediator in -induced RPE degeneration.

The study revealed a specific TNFα-iP-NLRP3 pathway as a central mechanism in Aβ-induced RPE degeneration, with iP inhibition disrupting this inflammatory cascade.

Key Findings

  • Aβ stimulation initiates a signaling cascade from Müller glia to RPE cells.
  • Aβ exposure significantly increased TNFα secretion in Müller glia.
  • Immunoproteasome inhibition reduced TNFα release from glial cells.
  • Neutralizing glia-derived TNFα decreased iP activity and mitigated EMT in RPE cells.
  • Glia-derived TNFα is central to Aβ-induced RPE degeneration via the TNFα-iP-NLRP3 pathway.

Why It Matters

This research provides a clearer understanding of how Alzheimer's disease pathology impacts retinal health, specifically the RPE degeneration. For those interested in neurodegenerative disease interventions, it highlights the immunoproteasome as a promising therapeutic target. The identification of the TNFα-iP-NLRP3 pathway offers a specific mechanism to disrupt, potentially leading to novel strategies for maintaining retinal integrity in AD. Targeting the immunoproteasome could offer a new approach to prevent vision loss associated with AD, moving beyond current symptomatic treatments. While preclinical, this work lays the groundwork for developing specific iP inhibitors or TNFα modulators for clinical translation in AD-related retinal complications.


alzheimers retinal-degeneration immunoproteasome inflammation tnf-alpha nlrp3
Source: pubmed:42337979 · Ingested 2026-06-24 · Digest: gemini-2.5-flash