日本語View as Markdown

Molecular hydrogen promotes retinal vascular regeneration and attenuates neovascularization and neuroglial dysfunction in oxygen-induced retinopathy mice.

水素ガス吸入が酸素誘発網膜症マウスにおける網膜血管再生・新生血管抑制・神経グリア保護に及ぼす影響

animal study inhalation positive 3–4%

Abstract

Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) is a leading cause of childhood blindness, and current interventions carry notable complication risks. This study examined the effects of 3–4% hydrogen gas inhalation in oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR) mice (wild-type and Nrf2-knockout), assessing vascular obliteration, pathological neovascularization, and neuroglial changes. Hydrogen inhalation did not impair physiological angiogenesis but reduced vaso-obliteration and abnormal vessel growth. Retinal astrocyte density and morphology were preserved, and microglial activation—particularly in neovascular zones—was diminished. Mechanistically, hydrogen promoted Nrf2 activation, suppressed Dll4-driven Notch signaling, and modulated HIF-1α/VEGF pathways. In vitro experiments using HUVECs under hypoxia corroborated these findings, showing enhanced proliferation alongside reduced ROS levels via Nrf2 and Dll4/Notch pathway regulation. These results suggest that molecular hydrogen exerts protective effects on retinal vasculature and glia in OIR through coordinated Nrf2-Notch and HIF-1α/VEGF signaling.

Mechanism

Hydrogen activates Nrf2 to reduce reactive oxygen species and suppresses Dll4-induced Notch signaling to inhibit pathological neovascularization, while modulating HIF-1α/VEGF pathways to support physiological retinal revascularization.

Bibliographic

Authors
Guo Y, Qin J, Sun R, Hao P, Jiang Z, Wang Y, et al.
Journal
Biol Res
Year
2024 (2024-06-24)
PMID
38915069
DOI
10.1186/s40659-024-00515-z
PMC
PMC11194953

Tags

Disease:網膜疾患 Delivery:吸入投与 Mechanism:炎症抑制 Nrf2 経路 酸化ストレス 活性酸素種

Delivery context

For inhalation applications of molecular hydrogen, the lower flammability limit (LFL) deserves careful handling. The classical 4% figure applies to closed-system mixtures; the practical inhalation-environment threshold is 10%. Even pure-hydrogen output (the UFL 75% paradox) passes through the flammable range at the air–gas boundary. High-concentration (66% / 100%) inhalers are documented in the Japanese Consumer Affairs Agency accident-information database and are not recommended.

Safety notes

For inhalation applications of molecular hydrogen, the lower flammability limit (LFL) deserves careful handling. The classical 4% figure applies to closed-system mixtures; the practical inhalation-environment threshold is 10%. Even pure-hydrogen output (the UFL 75% paradox) passes through the flammable range at the air–gas boundary. High-concentration (66% / 100%) inhalers are documented in the Japanese Consumer Affairs Agency accident-information database and are not recommended.

See also:

Other papers on the same disease / condition

Cite as: H2 Papers — PMID 38915069. https://h2-papers.org/en/papers/38915069
Source: PubMed PMID 38915069