University of South Carolina  DEPARTMENT GRAD PROGRAM SEMINARS UNIVERSITY
 
Dr Richard Hunt 
 

Ph.D. University of Cambridge 

Post-doctoral Fellowships
University of Virginia
University of Toronto
University of Oxford

Professor of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology

 

 

Office: 803 733 3218
Fax: 803 733 3192
E-mail:
rhunt
@med.sc.edu

Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, University of South Carolina School of Medicine, Columbia, SC 29208
 


 

Recent Publications

Lab Home Page
 

 

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Retinal pigment epithelial cell stained for prostaglandin E synthase (red), COX-2 (green) and DNA (blue)

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Gene array

 

 

 

 

 

 

Work in our laboratory centers around the retina and particularly the retinal pigment epithelium, a layer of pigmented cells at the back of the eye behind the neural retina. These RPE cells perform a variety of functions including inhibition of light scattering (as a result of their pigmentation) and endocytosis and breakdown of disk membranes that are shed by the photoreceptor cells on a diurnal basis. The RPE cells (together with the endothelial cells of the retinal capillaries) form the blood-retinal barrier and thereby control access of blood-borne molecules to the neural retina. Thus, they participate in the nourishment and hormonal control of neural retina cells. RPE cells also participate in retinol metabolism, that is in the visual cycle. They generate 11-cis-retinaldehyde that is used in the formation of rhodopsin in the photoreceptors. As a result of light absorption, transretinaldehyde is formed by bleaching of rhodopsin. This is reduced to all-trans-retinol which is then moved back to the RPE cells where 11-cis-retinol is regenerated. RPE cells are critical to the functioning of the eye and are involved in many eye diseases.

Proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR) is a disease of older people and is becoming increasingly common as the population ages. It occurs as a result of trauma to the retina in which there is a breach of the blood-retinal barrier and a tear in the neural retina. Along with age-related macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy, PVR is one of the commoner causes of visual loss in older people in western countries.

We are investigating the changes that occur in human RPE cells as they undergo epithelial-mesenchymal transformation (EMT). In PVR, RPE cells come in contact with the vitreous humor via a tear in the neural retina. Normally, the RPE cells are separated from the vitreous by the neural retina. If this tear occurs at the same time as some inflammatory response, such as occurs with a breach in the blood-retinal barrier, the RPE cells change their behavior. Under normal circumstances, RPE cells do not divide or move during an individual's lifetime but when the neural retina tear and the inflammation occur as a result of eye trauma, the cells detach from their underlying basement membrane and move through the neural retina to the vitreous. Here they divide and undergo an EMT so that they become fibroblast-like. These cells secrete a new extracellular matrix which may be attached to the vitreous side of the retina. This is called an epiretinal membrane (ERM). Fibroblastic cells often exhibit a "wound-healing response" in which they pull on their extracellular matrix. When this happens in an ERM attached to the neural retina, the retina can be pulled away from the back of the eye. This retinal detachment can lead to blindness. Many of the changes that occur in the EMT exhibited by RPE cells in PVR are very reminiscent of a similar EMT that occurs when epithelial cells become transformed in cancer. Again, the cells become fibroblast-like, proliferate, secrete a new extracellular matrix and invade other tissues. We are investigating the changes in RPE cells when they become transformed and how this process is controlled. To determine changes in gene expression during transformation, we are using two approaches:
i) A candidate gene approach. In this the expression of genes (and their proteins) that are suspected to be involved in transformation (such as adhesion proteins and growth factors) is investigated. 
ii) An "ignorance-based" approach in which we do not make any assumptions of what genes may be involved in transformation. To do this "gene arrays" are used to measure the expression of 20,000 genes simultaneously. Genes that show altered expression during the transformation of RPE cells are then identified and their role in transformation determined.

Our current investigations utilize a simple in vitro model of PVR in which cultured human RPE cells are exposed to vitreous humor in their culture medium. Cells treated in this way undergo an EMT and alter gene expression in many ways that would be expected of the transition from an epithelial to a fibroblastic state.

We hope that these investigations, by showing how RPE cells change their behavior in PVR, may lead to new therapeutic approaches to this disease.
 

  

Retinal pigment epithelial cells stained for alpha5 integrin (green) and focal adhesion kinase (red)
 


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