Although the expression of K15 and K19 differ in humans and mice, specific staining patterns can be used to characterize the epithelial phenotype in normal and diseased ocular surface.
Corneal endothelial dysfunction remains a major indication for corneal transplantation. Both corneal endothelial cells and stromal cells originate from the neural crest, but have distinct phenotypes and function in the adult cornea. We previously reported that stem cells isolated from the adult corneal stroma [cornea-derived precursors (COPs)] show characteristics of multipotent neural crest-derived stem cells. In this study, we report the induction of functional tissue-engineered corneal endothelium (TECE) from mouse and human COPs. TECE was engineered from Wnt1-Cre/Floxed EGFP mouse COPs in a medium containing retinoic acid and glycogen synthase kinase (GSK) 3β inhibitor (activator of Wnt/β-catenin signaling). The expression levels of major markers characterizing corneal endothelial function (Atp1a1, Slc4a4, Car2, Col4a2, Col8a2, and Cdh2) were significantly upregulated. Both retinoic acid and GSK 3β inhibitor upregulated the expression of Pitx2, a homeobox gene involved in the development of the anterior segment of the eye. GSK 3β inhibitor increased Atp1a1 expression and Na,K-ATPase pump activity of TECE, which was significantly higher than COPs or control 3T3 cells, and 2.6-fold higher than cultured mouse corneal endothelial cells. Mouse TECE transplanted into rabbit corneas maintained transparency and corneal thickness, whereas control corneas without TECE showed marked edema and increased corneal thickness. Furthermore, we successfully induced TECE from human COPs, and human TECE transplanted into rabbit corneas also maintained corneal transparency and thickness. This protocol enables efficient production of corneal endothelium from corneal stromal stem cells by direct induction, which may lead to a novel stem cell therapy for corneal endothelial dysfunction.
Immediate antioxidant therapy with H2-enriched irrigation solution is a new potent treatment of angiogenesis in cornea to prevent blindness caused by alkali burn.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.