The maintenance of the physiological function of the eye as a highly differentiated sensory organ relies on tight metabolic regulation. The intramitochondrial tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle serves as a core pathway for ocular energy metabolism, providing essential metabolic substrates and reducing equivalents for corneal homeostasis and retinal phototransmission. However, significant scientific questions remain. The question is, are there significant heterogeneities in energy utilization between different anatomical tissues of the eye? Furthermore, how does biological sex modulate the ocular metabolic profile through different biological pathways?
Previous studies have mainly employed relative quantification to analyze metabolite abundance, and while reflecting trends, have struggled to accurately characterize differences in actual metabolic pool size and flux between tissues. This limitation in quantitative precision has hindered detailed analysis of the molecular evolution of degenerative eye diseases such as glaucoma and age-related macular degeneration.
In a recently published study, i discovery (2026) utilized high-sensitivity liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) to achieve absolute quantification of TCA cycle intermediates in mouse ocular tissues. This study, conducted by a team at West Virginia University, aims to build a standardized ocular metabolic reference model and account for dual differences in metabolic properties based on spatial distribution and biological sex.
Key finding: Deep coupling of spatial heterogeneity and sex-specificity
1. Tissue-specific metabolic phenotypes based on functional requirements: Study data indicate that the distribution of TCA cycle intermediates exhibits high spatial heterogeneity across different ocular tissues. The retina, one of the most oxygen-consuming tissues in the body, has significantly higher absolute concentrations of important metabolites such as cis-aconic acid, succinate, and fumarate, reflecting its strong mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation activity. In contrast, the cornea and lens exhibit a lower metabolic load, consistent with an avascular physiological environment. This correspondence between “tissue, function, and metabolism” reveals the biological basis of the different susceptibilities of ocular regions to metabolic stress and provides a quantitative basis for understanding tissue-specific vulnerabilities.
2. Sexual dimorphism of metabolic profiles and their biological significance: A major advance in this research is the identification of sex-related differences in ocular metabolism. Comparative analysis of male and female mice revealed that gender is an important variable influencing ocular metabolite concentrations. For example, women have higher baseline levels of certain TCA intermediates in the retina and RPE/choroidal complex compared to men. This sex-specific metabolic signature may be regulated by differences in sex hormone levels and the expression of associated metabolic enzymes. This finding provides a molecular basis for understanding the prevalence of gender-based eye diseases and suggests that gender should be considered as a central biological variable when developing therapies targeting mitochondrial function.
3. Dynamic monitoring of homeostasis and metabolite ratios: The researchers further assessed mitochondrial catalytic efficiency and redox balance under different physiological conditions by calculating the absolute concentration ratios of specific metabolites, such as the malate to fumarate ratio. Experimental data document subtle fluctuations in metabolite levels at specific time points, indicating that ocular tissues are equipped with sophisticated metabolic compensation mechanisms. This dynamic normative model established by absolute quantification provides sensitive biomarkers to capture “metabolic changes” at early pathological stages.
Scientific and clinical significance
In this study, we precisely map the bioenergetic landscape of ocular tissues by quantifying the absolute concentrations of TCA cycles. This process reveals complex substrate transport and enzyme dynamics within the mitochondrial matrix, with adaptive coordination across different tissue environments.
This study concludes that the tissue-specific and sex-specific nature of ocular metabolism is essential to maintaining physiological homeostasis of the visual system. These findings not only provide a reliable reference dataset for ocular metabolomics, but also lay the foundation for elucidating the metabolic origins of blinding eye diseases. This marks a transition from macro-functional description to micro-metabolic precision assessment in ophthalmological research, and provides important theoretical support for future ophthalmological precision medicine.
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Reference magazines:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.edisc.2026.100018

