We are interested in the phagocytic function of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) that is an important part of the circadian renewal of photoreceptor rod and cone outer segments in the retina. Every morning, each RPE cell phagocytoses and digests thousands of aged outer segment disks shed by photoreceptors. Since RPE cells do not turn over in the adult eye, each individual cell must clear its enormous phagocytic load efficiently every 24 hours over many decades. This activity renders RPE cells the most active phagocytes in the body. Deficiency or delay in the RPE?s ability to phagocytose shed outer segment particles contribute to devastating human blinding diseases, such as age-related macular degeneration, which affects millions of the elderly, and retinitis pigmentosa.
The long?term objective of our research is to understand the molecular mechanisms, which maintain the strict 24 hour rhythm of the phagocytic function of the RPE in the eye.
Ongoing projects are:
Email: sfinne@med.cornell.edu

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