A research project led by the University of Fribourg has identified a promising new approach for treating age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a leading cause of blindness, by focusing on restoring the eye's natural cellular recycling system.

"The approach is attracting interest because it targets a broader mechanism associated with cellular ageing rather than focusing on a single symptom."
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) stands as a primary thief of sight in wealthy nations, and Switzerland is now leading the charge to stop it. As our population ages, retinal diseases are surging at an unprecedented rate, threatening the independence of thousands. AMD ruthlessly targets two essential cell types: the light-detecting photoreceptors and the retinal pigment epithelial cells that nourish them. When these cells fail, central vision vanishes. However, a groundbreaking project spearheaded by the University of Fribourg has identified a revolutionary target that could pivot the entire field of ophthalmology from symptom management to actual cellular restoration. This isn't just another incremental study; it is a bold attempt to fix the eye's internal machinery before it breaks down entirely.
The human eye possesses a sophisticated internal cleaning system that simply gives up as we age. Led by Patricia Boya, the research team focused on chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA), a biological quality-control process. In a healthy eye, specialized 'chaperone' proteins act as microscopic waste collectors, identifying damaged proteins and hauling them to lysosomes for destruction. But in AMD patients, this system collapses. Waste accumulates, cells suffocate under the weight of their own debris, and inflammation skyrockets. The Fribourg discovery proves that CMA is exceptionally active in the retina, suggesting that its failure is not just a byproduct of disease, but a primary driver of blindness itself. By identifying this specific failure point, Swiss scientists have located the 'master switch' for retinal health.
The breakthrough moves beyond theory with the introduction of CA77.1, an experimental molecule designed to jumpstart the eye's stalled recycling pathway. In rigorous laboratory models, the activation of this pathway did more than just clear trash—it actively slowed the deterioration of vision and slashed inflammation levels. Working alongside Jörn Dengjel and international collaborators, the team tested this approach on cells derived directly from AMD patients. The results were staggering: strengthening the internal cleaning system restored cellular balance and fortified the cells against external stress. This shift in focus—targeting the broader mechanism of cellular aging rather than a single protein—marks a dramatic departure from traditional pharmaceutical approaches, offering a more holistic and potentially more effective intervention.
The numbers surrounding AMD are nothing short of alarming. Currently, 1 in 10 people over the age of 50 show signs of the condition. While many cases begin as mild, the risk profile escalates sharply with every passing decade. By the time a person reaches their late 60s, the prevalence hits 10%. For those over 80, the situation is critical: more than 25%—a staggering one in four—suffer from the disease. In Switzerland, where life expectancy is among the highest in the world, this demographic reality creates an urgent mandate for innovation. Advanced forms of the disease already threaten the central vision of 1-2% of the over-50 population, making the University of Fribourg’s research a vital economic and social necessity for the country's future.
While the research is in its early stages, the implications for Swiss biotech and global health are profound. This approach offers a glimmer of hope that we might one day prevent vision loss before it even starts. By helping retinal cells clear waste more efficiently, future therapies could effectively 'de-age' the eye. Switzerland continues to cement its reputation as a global hub for life sciences, proving that the solution to age-old problems lies in the microscopic details of cellular biology. For millions at risk of losing their sight, the work being done in Fribourg isn't just science—it's a lifeline. The next phase of clinical development will be watched with intense scrutiny as the world grapples with an aging population that refuses to stay in the dark.