PURPOSE. Lenses have an intracellular hydrostatic pressure gradient to drive fluid from central fiber cells to surface epithelial cells. Pressure is regulated by a feedback control system that relies on transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV)1 and TRPV4 channels. The ciliary muscle transmits tension to the lens through the zonules of Zinn. Here, we have examined if ciliary muscle tension influenced the lens intracellular hydrostatic pressure gradient. METHODS. We measured the ciliary body position and intracellular hydrostatic pressures in mouse lenses while pharmacologically causing relaxation or contraction of the ciliary muscle. We also used inhibitors of TRPV1 and TRPV4, in addition to phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) p110a knockout mice and immunostaining of phosphorylated protein kinase B (Akt), to determine how changes in ciliary muscle tension resulted in altered hydrostatic pressure. RESULTS. Ciliary muscle relaxation increased the distance between the ciliary body and the lens and caused a decrease in intracellular hydrostatic pressure that was dependent on intact zonules and could be blocked by inhibition of TRPV4. Ciliary contraction moved the ciliary body toward the lens and caused an increase in intracellular hydrostatic pressure and Akt phosphorylation that required intact zonules and was blocked by either inhibition of TRPV1 or genetic deletion of the p110a catalytic subunit of PI3K. CONCLUSIONS. These results show that the hydrostatic pressure gradient within the lens was influenced by the tension exerted on the lens by the ciliary muscle through the zonules of Zinn. Modulation of the gradient of intracellular hydrostatic pressure in the lens could alter the water content, and the gradient of refractive index.
CITATION STYLE
Chen, Y., Gao, J., Li, L., Sellitto, C., Mathias, R. T., Donaldson, P. J., & White, T. W. (2019). The ciliary muscle and zonules of ZinN modulate lens intracellular hydrostatic pressure through transient receptor potential vanilloid channels. Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, 60(13), 4416–4424. https://doi.org/10.1167/iovs.19-27794
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