Modulating One-Carbon Metabolism with B-Vitamins to Protect the Retinal Barrier and Prevent Retinal Degeneration
Hossameldin Abouhish, Lamiaa Shalaby, Omar Elzayat, Neelesh Peddireddy, Amany Tawfik

TL;DR
This study shows that B-vitamin deficiency disrupts retinal blood barriers and causes retinal damage, but these effects can be reversed with B-vitamin supplementation.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that B-vitamin supplementation can restore retinal vascular integrity disrupted by B-vitamin deficiency.
Findings
B-vitamin deficiency caused elevated homocysteine and retinal vascular leakage in mice.
B-vitamin supplementation restored retinal barrier integrity and reduced albumin leakage.
Deficiency led to decreased tight junction proteins, indicating blood-retinal barrier disruption.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Vitamin B12 deficiency is increasingly recognized as a contributor in both vascular and neurodegenerative aging-related disorders. Its deficiency disrupts one-carbon metabolism, leading to impaired homocysteine (Hcy) cycling. Elevated Hcy is a well-established risk factor for vascular dysfunction. Previously, we established that elevated Hcy contributes to aging retinal diseases and plays a central role in blood retinal barrier (BRB) dysfunction. Building on this foundation, the present study examines how B-vitamin deficiency disrupts one-carbon metabolism and whether restoring these vitamins can serve as a preventive or therapeutic strategy. Since B-vitamins (B6, B9, and B12) are crucial cofactors in the metabolism of Hcy, we investigated how dietary changes in these vitamins affect serum Hcy levels and retinal vascular integrity in mice. Methods: C57BL/6-…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFolate and B Vitamins Research · Alcoholism and Thiamine Deficiency · Retinal Diseases and Treatments
