Lysophosphatidic acid improves corneal endothelial density in tissue culture by stimulating stromal secretion of interleukin‐1β

2020 
The short supply of donor corneas is exacerbated by the unsuitability of donors with insufficient endothelial cell density. Few studies have investigated promoting corneal endothelial cell proliferation to increase the endothelial cell density. We hypothesize that pre-transplantation treatment of proliferative tissue-cultivated corneas may increase corneal endothelial cell density. We observed that the airlift cultures were superior to immersion cultures with respect to both transparency and thickness. In this tissue culture system, we observed that lysophosphatidic acid increased the rabbit corneal endothelial cell density, number of BrdU-positive cells and improve wound healing. We also observed an indirect effect of lysophosphatidic acid on corneal endothelial cell proliferation mediated by the stimulation of interleukin-1beta secretion from stromal cells. Human corneal tissues treated with lysophosphatidic acid or interleukin-1beta contained significantly more Ki-67-positive cells than untreated group. The lysophosphatidic acid- or interleukin-1beta-treated cultured tissue remained hexagon-shaped, with ZO-1 expression and no evidence of the endothelial-mesenchymal transition. Our novel protocol of tissue culture may be applicable for eye banks to optimize corneal grafting.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    41
    References
    2
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []