Kavli Affiliate: Seth Blackshaw
| Authors: Krishna Singh, yang jin, Mingwen Hu, Isabella Pallazo, Marisol Cano,, Thanh Hoang, Imran Bhutto, Shusheng Wang, Debasish Sinha, Seth Blackshaw, Jiang Qian and James T. Handa
| Summary:
Environmental exposure such as cigarette smoke induces epigenetic changes that can induce degenerative heterogeneity and accelerate aging. In early age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the leading worldwide cause of blindness among the elderly, retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cell heterogeneity is a key change. Since smoking is the strongest environmental risk factor for AMD, we hypothesized that cigarette smoke induces degenerative RPE heterogeneity through epigenetic changes that are distinct from aging, and that with aging, the RPE becomes vulnerable to cigarette smoke insult. We administered cigarette smoke condensate (CSC) intravitreally to young and aged mice and performed snRNA-seq and snATAC-seq on the RPE/choroid. This analysis identified separate cell clusters corresponding to healthy and abnormal, dedifferentiated RPE in both aged vehicle-treated and young CSC-treated mice. The dedifferentiated RPE were characterized by a global decrease in chromatin accessibility and decreased expression of genes in functional categories that were linked to hallmarks of aging. Notably, young, dedifferentiated RPE also exhibited a compensatory upregulation of hallmarks of aging-related genes, specifically those related to mitochondrial function and proteostasis. In contrast, aged dedifferentiated RPE did not express these compensatory changes, and did not survive CSC treatment, as experimentally verified with TUNEL labeling. These changes are relevant to early AMD because we identified through scRNA-seq, similar dedifferentiated and healthy macular RPE clusters in a donor who smoked and another with early AMD, but not from a nonsmoker. Degenerative cellular heterogeneity can include an abnormal cluster that jeopardizes cell survival and may represent an additional hallmark of ocular aging.