Age- and glaucoma-induced changes to the ocular glymphatic system

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The ocular glymphatic system supports bidirectional fluid transport along the optic nerve, thereby removes metabolic wastes including amyloid-β. To better understand this biological process, we examined the distributions of intravitreally and intracisternally infused tracers in full-length optic nerves from different age groups of mice. Aging was linked to globally impaired ocular glymphatic fluid transport, similar to what has seen previously in the brain. Aging also reduced the pupillary responsiveness to light stimulation and abolished light-induced facilitation in anterograde ocular glymphatic flow. In contrast to normal aging, in the DBA/2 J model of glaucoma, we found a pathological increase of glymphatic fluid transport to the anterior optic nerve that was associated with dilation of the perivascular spaces. Thus, aging and glaucoma have fundamentally different effects on ocular glymphatic fluid transport. Manipulation of glymphatic fluid transport might therefore present a new target for the treatment of glaucoma.

Original languageEnglish
Article number106322
JournalNeurobiology of Disease
Volume188
Number of pages9
ISSN0969-9961
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

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Publisher Copyright:
© 2023

    Research areas

  • Enlarged perivascular space, glaucoma, Ocular aging, Ocular glymphatic system

ID: 371286658