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Vol. 289, Issue 1, 361-370, April 1999
Departments of
Pharmacology and Toxicology (M.T.S., M.M.H., J.T.E.)
and
Cellular Biology and Anatomy (P.S., J.N.), Medical College of
Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Formic acid is the toxic metabolite responsible for the retinal and
optic nerve toxicity produced in methanol intoxication. Previous
studies in our laboratory have documented formate-induced retinal
dysfunction and histopathology in a rodent model of methanol intoxication. The present studies define the time and concentration dependence of formate-induced retinal toxicity in methanol-intoxicated rats. Retinal function was assessed 24, 48, and 72 h after the initial dose of methanol by flicker electroretinographic measurements. Retinal histopathology was assessed at the same time intervals. Rod-
and cone-mediated electroretinogram (ERG) responses were attenuated in
a formate concentration- and time-dependent manner, and both retinal
sensitivity and maximal responsiveness to light were diminished.
Attenuation of UV-cone-mediated responses was temporally delayed in
comparison to the functional deficits observed in the 15 Hz/510 nm
responses, which have a rod-mediated component and occurred at
significantly higher formate concentrations. Both 15 Hz/510 nm and
UV-cone-mediated ERG responses were undetectable by 72 h; however,
if light intensity was increased, a retinal ERG response could be
recorded, indicating that photoreceptor function was profoundly
attenuated, but not abolished, under these intoxication conditions.
Functional changes preceded structural alterations. Histopathological
changes were most pronounced in the outer retina with evidence of inner
segment swelling, photoreceptor mitochondrial disruption, and the
appearance of fragmented photoreceptor nuclei in the outer nuclear
layer. The nature of both the functional and structural alterations
observed are consistent with formate-induced inhibition of
mitochondrial energy production, resulting in photoreceptor dysfunction
and pathology.