Soluble tumor necrosis factor receptors are present in human vitreous and shed by retinal pigment epithelial cells

1996 
Abstract Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several retinal diseases. Soluble forms of the TNF receptors, p55 (55 kDa) and p75 (75 kDa), have recently been identified in biological fluids and may regulate TNF activity. The potential biological significance of these receptors for the human retina was examined by determining their presence in human vitreous and their release from eye cup explants in which the retina has been removed leaving an intact retinal pigment epithelium (HRPE). Normal human vitreous and conditioned medium from eye-cup HRPE explants demonstrated the presence of soluble p55 and p75. Soluble p55 was significantly more abundant than p75 in all vitreous samples ( P P P ≤0.001); whereas, pharmacological inhibition of protein kinase C with calphostin-C significantly decreased the shedding of p55 ( P ≤0.001). The results indicate that primary cultured HRPE cells shed p55 and regulate this shedding in part through the protein kinase C pathway. The presence of soluble TNF receptors within normal human vitreous and within conditioned medium from the eye-cup HRPE explant model suggests that these soluble receptors may have a biological function in the eye.
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