Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to determine the effect of
pinacidil, a nonselective KATP channel opener, on diabetes-induced retinal
gliosis and inflammation.
Methods: Primary and immortalized cell lines of
retinal microglia and Müller cells were used to set up a coculture model. In
the trans-well system, microglia were seeded in the upper chamber and Müller
cells in the bottom chamber. Microglia were polarized into proinflammatory (M1,
with lipopolysaccharide and INF-γ) with or without different pinacidil
concentrations before coculturing with Müller cells. The expression of
inflammatory or anti-inflammatory genes and protein in microglia, and the
expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), Kir4.1, and AQP4 in
Müller cells were examined by real-time polymerase chain reaction and Western
blot. Pinacidil was injected intravitreally into streptozotocin-induced
diabetic rats. Retinal gliosis and inflammation were examined by
immunohistochemistry and Western blot.
Results: Intravitreal injection of pinacidil
alleviated diabetes-induced Müller cell gliosis and microglial activation and
reduced vascular endothelial growth factor expression. In vitro study
demonstrated that pinacidil inhibited tumor necrosis factor and interleukin-1β
expression in M1-type microglia and alleviated the M1 microglia-induced GFAP
expression in the Müller cells. Furthermore, we found that pinacidil on its
own, or in combination with IL-4, can upregulate arginase-1 (Arg-1) and Kir6.1
expression in microglial cells.
Conclusions: Our results suggest that potassium channels
are critically involved in diabetes-induced gliosis and microglial activation.
The KATP opener, pinacidil, can reduce microglial activation by upregulating
Kir6.1 expression.