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Loss of Notch1 Disrupts the Barrier Repair in the Corneal Epithelium

The corneal epithelium is the outermost layer of the cornea that directly faces the outside environment, hence it plays a critical barrier function. Previously, conditional loss of Notch1 on the ocular surface was found to cause inflammation and keratinization of the corneal epithelium. This was in...

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Autores principales: Movahedan, Asadolah, Afsharkhamseh, Neda, Sagha, Hossein M., Shah, Jarna R., Milani, Behrad Y., Milani, Farnoud Y., Logothetis, Hercules D., Chan, Chi-Chao, Djalilian, Ali R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3715447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874882
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069113
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author Movahedan, Asadolah
Afsharkhamseh, Neda
Sagha, Hossein M.
Shah, Jarna R.
Milani, Behrad Y.
Milani, Farnoud Y.
Logothetis, Hercules D.
Chan, Chi-Chao
Djalilian, Ali R.
author_facet Movahedan, Asadolah
Afsharkhamseh, Neda
Sagha, Hossein M.
Shah, Jarna R.
Milani, Behrad Y.
Milani, Farnoud Y.
Logothetis, Hercules D.
Chan, Chi-Chao
Djalilian, Ali R.
author_sort Movahedan, Asadolah
collection PubMed
description The corneal epithelium is the outermost layer of the cornea that directly faces the outside environment, hence it plays a critical barrier function. Previously, conditional loss of Notch1 on the ocular surface was found to cause inflammation and keratinization of the corneal epithelium. This was in part attributed to impaired vitamin A metabolism, loss of the meibomian glands and recurrent eyelid trauma. We hypothesized that Notch1 plays an essential role in the corneal epithelial barrier function and is a contributing factor in the pathologic changes in these mice. Notch1 was conditionally deleted in adult Notch1(flox/flox), K14-Cre-ERT(+/-) mice using hydroxy-tamoxifen. The results indicated that conditional deletion of Notch1 on the ocular surface leads to progressive impairment of the epithelial barrier function before the onset of corneal opacification and keratinization. Loss of the barrier was demonstrated both by an increase in in vivo corneal fluorescein staining and by enhanced penetration of a small molecule through the epithelium. Corneal epithelial wounding resulted in significant delay in recovery of the barrier function in conditional Notch1(-/-) mice compared to wild type. Mice with conditional deletion of Notch1 did not demonstrate any evidence of dry eyes based on aqueous tear production and had normal conjunctival goblet cells. In a calcium switch experiment in vitro, Notch1(-/-) cells demonstrated delayed membrane localization of the tight junction protein ZO-1 consistent with a defect in the epithelial tight junction formation. These findings highlight the role of Notch1 in epithelial differentiation and suggest that intrinsic defects in the corneal epithelial barrier recovery after wounding is an important contributing factor to the development of inflammatory keratinization in Notch1(-/-) mice.
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spelling pubmed-37154472013-07-19 Loss of Notch1 Disrupts the Barrier Repair in the Corneal Epithelium Movahedan, Asadolah Afsharkhamseh, Neda Sagha, Hossein M. Shah, Jarna R. Milani, Behrad Y. Milani, Farnoud Y. Logothetis, Hercules D. Chan, Chi-Chao Djalilian, Ali R. PLoS One Research Article The corneal epithelium is the outermost layer of the cornea that directly faces the outside environment, hence it plays a critical barrier function. Previously, conditional loss of Notch1 on the ocular surface was found to cause inflammation and keratinization of the corneal epithelium. This was in part attributed to impaired vitamin A metabolism, loss of the meibomian glands and recurrent eyelid trauma. We hypothesized that Notch1 plays an essential role in the corneal epithelial barrier function and is a contributing factor in the pathologic changes in these mice. Notch1 was conditionally deleted in adult Notch1(flox/flox), K14-Cre-ERT(+/-) mice using hydroxy-tamoxifen. The results indicated that conditional deletion of Notch1 on the ocular surface leads to progressive impairment of the epithelial barrier function before the onset of corneal opacification and keratinization. Loss of the barrier was demonstrated both by an increase in in vivo corneal fluorescein staining and by enhanced penetration of a small molecule through the epithelium. Corneal epithelial wounding resulted in significant delay in recovery of the barrier function in conditional Notch1(-/-) mice compared to wild type. Mice with conditional deletion of Notch1 did not demonstrate any evidence of dry eyes based on aqueous tear production and had normal conjunctival goblet cells. In a calcium switch experiment in vitro, Notch1(-/-) cells demonstrated delayed membrane localization of the tight junction protein ZO-1 consistent with a defect in the epithelial tight junction formation. These findings highlight the role of Notch1 in epithelial differentiation and suggest that intrinsic defects in the corneal epithelial barrier recovery after wounding is an important contributing factor to the development of inflammatory keratinization in Notch1(-/-) mice. Public Library of Science 2013-07-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3715447/ /pubmed/23874882 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069113 Text en © 2013 Movahedan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Movahedan, Asadolah
Afsharkhamseh, Neda
Sagha, Hossein M.
Shah, Jarna R.
Milani, Behrad Y.
Milani, Farnoud Y.
Logothetis, Hercules D.
Chan, Chi-Chao
Djalilian, Ali R.
Loss of Notch1 Disrupts the Barrier Repair in the Corneal Epithelium
title Loss of Notch1 Disrupts the Barrier Repair in the Corneal Epithelium
title_full Loss of Notch1 Disrupts the Barrier Repair in the Corneal Epithelium
title_fullStr Loss of Notch1 Disrupts the Barrier Repair in the Corneal Epithelium
title_full_unstemmed Loss of Notch1 Disrupts the Barrier Repair in the Corneal Epithelium
title_short Loss of Notch1 Disrupts the Barrier Repair in the Corneal Epithelium
title_sort loss of notch1 disrupts the barrier repair in the corneal epithelium
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3715447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874882
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069113
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