Abstract
Mouse models of type I diabetes offer the potential to combine genetic approaches with other pharmacological or physiological manipulations to investigate the pathophysiology and treatment of diabetic retinopathy. Type I diabetes is induced in mice through chemical toxins or can arise spontaneously from genetic mutations. Both models are associated with retinal vascular and neuronal changes. Retinal transcriptomic responses in C57BL/6J mice treated with streptozotocin and Ins2Akita/+ were compared after 3 months of hyperglycemia. Specific gene expression changes suggest a neurovascular inflammatory response in diabetic retinopathy. Genes common to the two models may represent theresponse of the retina to hyperglycemia, while changes unique to each model may represent time-dependent disease progression differences in the various models. Further investigation of the commonalities and differences between mouse models of type I diabetes may define cause and effect events in early diabetic retinopathy disease progression. © The Author(s) 2009.
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Freeman, W. M., Bixler, G. V., Brucklacher, R. M., Walsh, E., Kimball, S. R., Jefferson, L. S., & Bronson, S. K. (2009). Transcriptomic comparison of the retina in two mouse models of diabetes. Journal of Ocular Biology, Diseases, and Informatics, 2(4), 202–213. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12177-009-9045-3
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