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Platelet Recruitment Promotes Keratocyte Repopulation following Corneal Epithelial Abrasion in the Mouse

Corneal abrasion not only damages the epithelium but also induces stromal keratocyte death at the site of injury. While a coordinated cascade of inflammatory cell recruitment facilitates epithelial restoration, it is unclear if this cascade is necessary for keratocyte recovery. Since platelet and ne...

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Autores principales: Lam, Fong W., Phillips, Jenny, Landry, Paul, Magadi, Sri, Smith, C. Wayne, Rumbaut, Rolando E., Burns, Alan R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4361664/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25775402
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118950
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author Lam, Fong W.
Phillips, Jenny
Landry, Paul
Magadi, Sri
Smith, C. Wayne
Rumbaut, Rolando E.
Burns, Alan R.
author_facet Lam, Fong W.
Phillips, Jenny
Landry, Paul
Magadi, Sri
Smith, C. Wayne
Rumbaut, Rolando E.
Burns, Alan R.
author_sort Lam, Fong W.
collection PubMed
description Corneal abrasion not only damages the epithelium but also induces stromal keratocyte death at the site of injury. While a coordinated cascade of inflammatory cell recruitment facilitates epithelial restoration, it is unclear if this cascade is necessary for keratocyte recovery. Since platelet and neutrophil (PMN) recruitment after corneal abrasion is beneficial to epithelial wound healing, we wanted to determine if these cells play a role in regulating keratocyte repopulation after epithelial abrasion. A 2 mm diameter central epithelial region was removed from the corneas of C57BL/6 wildtype (WT), P-selectin deficient (P-sel(-/-)), and CD18 hypomorphic (CD18(hypo)) mice using the Algerbrush II. Corneas were studied at 6h intervals out to 48h post-injury to evaluate platelet and PMN cell numbers; additional corneas were studied at 1, 4, 14, and 28 days post injury to evaluate keratocyte numbers. In WT mice, epithelial abrasion induced a loss of anterior central keratocytes and keratocyte recovery was rapid and incomplete, reaching ~70% of uninjured baseline values by 4 days post-injury but no further improvement at 28 days post-injury. Consistent with a beneficial role for platelets and PMNs in wound healing, keratocyte recovery was significantly depressed at 4 days post-injury (~30% of uninjured baseline) in P-sel(-/-) mice, which are known to have impaired platelet and PMN recruitment after corneal abrasion. Passive transfer of platelets from WT, but not P-sel(-/-), into P-sel(-/-) mice prior to injury restored anterior central keratocyte numbers at 4 days post-injury to P-sel(-/-) uninjured baseline levels. While PMN infiltration in injured CD18(hypo) mice was similar to injured WT mice, platelet recruitment was markedly decreased and anterior central keratocyte recovery was significantly reduced (~50% of baseline) at 4–28 days post-injury. Collectively, the data suggest platelets and platelet P-selectin are critical for efficient keratocyte recovery after corneal epithelial abrasion.
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spelling pubmed-43616642015-03-23 Platelet Recruitment Promotes Keratocyte Repopulation following Corneal Epithelial Abrasion in the Mouse Lam, Fong W. Phillips, Jenny Landry, Paul Magadi, Sri Smith, C. Wayne Rumbaut, Rolando E. Burns, Alan R. PLoS One Research Article Corneal abrasion not only damages the epithelium but also induces stromal keratocyte death at the site of injury. While a coordinated cascade of inflammatory cell recruitment facilitates epithelial restoration, it is unclear if this cascade is necessary for keratocyte recovery. Since platelet and neutrophil (PMN) recruitment after corneal abrasion is beneficial to epithelial wound healing, we wanted to determine if these cells play a role in regulating keratocyte repopulation after epithelial abrasion. A 2 mm diameter central epithelial region was removed from the corneas of C57BL/6 wildtype (WT), P-selectin deficient (P-sel(-/-)), and CD18 hypomorphic (CD18(hypo)) mice using the Algerbrush II. Corneas were studied at 6h intervals out to 48h post-injury to evaluate platelet and PMN cell numbers; additional corneas were studied at 1, 4, 14, and 28 days post injury to evaluate keratocyte numbers. In WT mice, epithelial abrasion induced a loss of anterior central keratocytes and keratocyte recovery was rapid and incomplete, reaching ~70% of uninjured baseline values by 4 days post-injury but no further improvement at 28 days post-injury. Consistent with a beneficial role for platelets and PMNs in wound healing, keratocyte recovery was significantly depressed at 4 days post-injury (~30% of uninjured baseline) in P-sel(-/-) mice, which are known to have impaired platelet and PMN recruitment after corneal abrasion. Passive transfer of platelets from WT, but not P-sel(-/-), into P-sel(-/-) mice prior to injury restored anterior central keratocyte numbers at 4 days post-injury to P-sel(-/-) uninjured baseline levels. While PMN infiltration in injured CD18(hypo) mice was similar to injured WT mice, platelet recruitment was markedly decreased and anterior central keratocyte recovery was significantly reduced (~50% of baseline) at 4–28 days post-injury. Collectively, the data suggest platelets and platelet P-selectin are critical for efficient keratocyte recovery after corneal epithelial abrasion. Public Library of Science 2015-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4361664/ /pubmed/25775402 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118950 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lam, Fong W.
Phillips, Jenny
Landry, Paul
Magadi, Sri
Smith, C. Wayne
Rumbaut, Rolando E.
Burns, Alan R.
Platelet Recruitment Promotes Keratocyte Repopulation following Corneal Epithelial Abrasion in the Mouse
title Platelet Recruitment Promotes Keratocyte Repopulation following Corneal Epithelial Abrasion in the Mouse
title_full Platelet Recruitment Promotes Keratocyte Repopulation following Corneal Epithelial Abrasion in the Mouse
title_fullStr Platelet Recruitment Promotes Keratocyte Repopulation following Corneal Epithelial Abrasion in the Mouse
title_full_unstemmed Platelet Recruitment Promotes Keratocyte Repopulation following Corneal Epithelial Abrasion in the Mouse
title_short Platelet Recruitment Promotes Keratocyte Repopulation following Corneal Epithelial Abrasion in the Mouse
title_sort platelet recruitment promotes keratocyte repopulation following corneal epithelial abrasion in the mouse
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4361664/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25775402
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118950
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