Glaucoma is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by visual field loss associated with optic nerve damage and ocular hypertension. The biological basis for the elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) is largely unknown, such that lowering the IOP is currently the only established treatment. Several animal models have been developed to elucidate the mechanism underlying the increased IOP and for use in drug discovery research, but their utility is often limited by the occurrence of severe intraocular inflammation and by technical challenges. In this study, we developed a rabbit glaucoma model that does not require experimental disease induction. Rabbits were chosen as the model because their eyeballs are similar in size to those of humans, and they are easy to breed. By crossing rabbit strains with inherited glaucoma, as indicated by obvious buphthalmos, we produced a strain that exhibits ocular hypertension. The IOP of the Ocular Hypertension (OH) rabbits was significantly higher than that of the wild type (WT; normal New Zealand white rabbits) from the age of 3 weeks to at least 22 weeks. The significantly larger corneal diameter of the OH rabbits indicated ocular enlargement, whereas there was no significant difference in corneal thickness compared with WT rabbits. Anterior segment ocular coherence tomography and gonioscopic observations revealed an open angle in the OH rabbits. Hematoxylin and eosin (HE) staining together with Masson's trichrome staining showed abnormal collagen accumulation in the angle of the OH rabbit's eyes. Furthermore, aqueous humor (AH) outflow imaging following an intravitreal injection of a fluorescent probe into the anterior chamber for tissue-section analysis revealed retention of the probe in the area of collagen deposition in the OH eyes. The OH rabbits also had a time-dependent increase in the cup/disc ratio. In conclusion, investigations using our newly developed rabbit model of open-angle ocular hypertension showed that abnormal accumulation of extracellular matrix at the angle increased AH outflow resistance in the conventional outflow pathway, leading to a high IOP. Furthermore, the OH rabbits exhibited glaucomatous optic disc cupping over time. These findings suggest the utility of the OH rabbits as a model for open-angle glaucoma (OAG).
Keywords: Aqueous humor outflow; Conventional outflow pathway; Cup/disc ratio; Extracellular matrix accumulation; Fundas change; Glaucoma model; Open-angle glaucoma.
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