N. Lin et al., BASIC FIBROBLAST GROWTH-FACTOR TREATMENT DELAYS AGE-RELATED PHOTORECEPTOR DEGENERATION IN FISCHER-344 RATS, Experimental Eye Research, 64(2), 1997, pp. 239-248
This study was undertaken to investigate the potential of basic fibrob
last growth factor (bFGF) to delay photoreceptor cell loss in retinas
of Fischer 344 rats which exhibit an age-related peripheral retinopath
y. Eight male 16-month-old Fischer 344 rats were injected intravitreal
ly with 2.0 mu g bFGF in the right eye, while the vehicle was injected
into the left eye and all rats were killed at two months post-injecti
on. Eight other Fischer rats were injected with either bFGF or vehicle
at 16 and again at 18 months, then killed two months later. After enu
cleation, eyes were processed for light and electron microscopic and m
orphometric analyses. The distance from the ora serrata to the point w
here the outer nuclear layer (ONL) in the superior retina was two cell
s in thickness, called the die-back zone, that represents the extent o
f the peripheral retinopathy, was compared in bFGF- and vehicle-inject
ed Fischer rats. These measurements revealed that the die-back zone in
retinas of eyes injected twice with bFGF was significantly reduced (P
< 0.01) when compared to this zone in retinas of age-matched rats tha
t received vehicle injections. However, there was no significant diffe
rence (P > 0.05) in this degeneration zone in retinas of 18-month-old
rats that received a single-bFGF injection when compared to retinas of
respective vehicle-injected rats. In addition, the ONL at 2 and 3 mm
from the ora serrata in the superior retina of bFGF-injected 20-month-
old Fischer rats was significantly thicker than corresponding regions
in retinas of vehicle-control rats. Furthermore, the photoreceptor cel
ls in the superior retina of 20-month-old rats which received two inje
ctions of bFGF had normal-appearing inner and outer segments, while th
e few photoreceptors had short inner and outer segments in vehicle-inj
ected retinas of Fisher rats. These findings reveal that injections of
bFGF into eyes of Fischer 344 rats significantly delays the progress
of photoreceptor cell degeneration suggesting that exogenous bFGF may
act as a survival-promoting factor in these aged retinas. (C) 1997 Aca
demic Press Limited.