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Inflammation in Dry Eye Syndrome: Identification and Targeting of Oxylipin-Mediated Mechanisms

Dry eye syndrome (DES) is characterized by decreased tear production and stability, leading to desiccating stress, inflammation and corneal damage. DES treatment may involve targeting the contributing inflammatory pathways mediated by polyunsaturated fatty acids and their derivatives, oxylipins. Her...

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Autores principales: Chistyakov, Dmitry V., Gancharova, Olga S., Baksheeva, Viktoriia E., Tiulina, Veronika V., Goriainov, Sergei V., Azbukina, Nadezhda V., Tsarkova, Marina S., Zamyatnin, Andrey A., Philippov, Pavel P., Sergeeva, Marina G., Senin, Ivan I., Zernii, Evgeni Yu.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7555241/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32932827
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines8090344
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author Chistyakov, Dmitry V.
Gancharova, Olga S.
Baksheeva, Viktoriia E.
Tiulina, Veronika V.
Goriainov, Sergei V.
Azbukina, Nadezhda V.
Tsarkova, Marina S.
Zamyatnin, Andrey A.
Philippov, Pavel P.
Sergeeva, Marina G.
Senin, Ivan I.
Zernii, Evgeni Yu.
author_facet Chistyakov, Dmitry V.
Gancharova, Olga S.
Baksheeva, Viktoriia E.
Tiulina, Veronika V.
Goriainov, Sergei V.
Azbukina, Nadezhda V.
Tsarkova, Marina S.
Zamyatnin, Andrey A.
Philippov, Pavel P.
Sergeeva, Marina G.
Senin, Ivan I.
Zernii, Evgeni Yu.
author_sort Chistyakov, Dmitry V.
collection PubMed
description Dry eye syndrome (DES) is characterized by decreased tear production and stability, leading to desiccating stress, inflammation and corneal damage. DES treatment may involve targeting the contributing inflammatory pathways mediated by polyunsaturated fatty acids and their derivatives, oxylipins. Here, using an animal model of general anesthesia-induced DES, we addressed these pathways by characterizing inflammatory changes in tear lipidome, in correlation with pathophysiological and biochemical signs of the disease. The decline in tear production was associated with the infiltration of inflammatory cells in the corneal stroma, which manifested one to three days after anesthesia, accompanied by changes in tear antioxidants and cytokines, resulting in persistent damage to the corneal epithelium. The inflammatory response manifested in the tear fluid as a short-term increase in linoleic and alpha-linolenic acid-derived oxylipins, followed by elevation in arachidonic acid and its derivatives, leukotriene B4 (5-lipoxigenase product), 12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (12-lipoxigeanse product) and prostaglandins, D2, E2 and F2α (cyclooxygenase products) that was observed for up to 7 days. Given these data, DES was treated by a novel ophthalmic formulation containing a dimethyl sulfoxide-based solution of zileuton, an inhibitor of 5-lipoxigenase and arachidonic acid release. The therapy markedly improved the corneal state in DES by attenuating cytokine- and oxylipin-mediated inflammatory responses, without affecting tear production rates. Interestingly, the high efficacy of the proposed therapy resulted from the synergetic action of its components, namely, the general healing activity of dimethyl sulfoxide, suppressing prostaglandins and the more specific effect of zileuton, downregulating leukotriene B4 (inhibition of T-cell recruitment), as well as upregulating docosahexaenoic acid (activation of resolution pathways).
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spelling pubmed-75552412020-10-19 Inflammation in Dry Eye Syndrome: Identification and Targeting of Oxylipin-Mediated Mechanisms Chistyakov, Dmitry V. Gancharova, Olga S. Baksheeva, Viktoriia E. Tiulina, Veronika V. Goriainov, Sergei V. Azbukina, Nadezhda V. Tsarkova, Marina S. Zamyatnin, Andrey A. Philippov, Pavel P. Sergeeva, Marina G. Senin, Ivan I. Zernii, Evgeni Yu. Biomedicines Article Dry eye syndrome (DES) is characterized by decreased tear production and stability, leading to desiccating stress, inflammation and corneal damage. DES treatment may involve targeting the contributing inflammatory pathways mediated by polyunsaturated fatty acids and their derivatives, oxylipins. Here, using an animal model of general anesthesia-induced DES, we addressed these pathways by characterizing inflammatory changes in tear lipidome, in correlation with pathophysiological and biochemical signs of the disease. The decline in tear production was associated with the infiltration of inflammatory cells in the corneal stroma, which manifested one to three days after anesthesia, accompanied by changes in tear antioxidants and cytokines, resulting in persistent damage to the corneal epithelium. The inflammatory response manifested in the tear fluid as a short-term increase in linoleic and alpha-linolenic acid-derived oxylipins, followed by elevation in arachidonic acid and its derivatives, leukotriene B4 (5-lipoxigenase product), 12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (12-lipoxigeanse product) and prostaglandins, D2, E2 and F2α (cyclooxygenase products) that was observed for up to 7 days. Given these data, DES was treated by a novel ophthalmic formulation containing a dimethyl sulfoxide-based solution of zileuton, an inhibitor of 5-lipoxigenase and arachidonic acid release. The therapy markedly improved the corneal state in DES by attenuating cytokine- and oxylipin-mediated inflammatory responses, without affecting tear production rates. Interestingly, the high efficacy of the proposed therapy resulted from the synergetic action of its components, namely, the general healing activity of dimethyl sulfoxide, suppressing prostaglandins and the more specific effect of zileuton, downregulating leukotriene B4 (inhibition of T-cell recruitment), as well as upregulating docosahexaenoic acid (activation of resolution pathways). MDPI 2020-09-11 /pmc/articles/PMC7555241/ /pubmed/32932827 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines8090344 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Chistyakov, Dmitry V.
Gancharova, Olga S.
Baksheeva, Viktoriia E.
Tiulina, Veronika V.
Goriainov, Sergei V.
Azbukina, Nadezhda V.
Tsarkova, Marina S.
Zamyatnin, Andrey A.
Philippov, Pavel P.
Sergeeva, Marina G.
Senin, Ivan I.
Zernii, Evgeni Yu.
Inflammation in Dry Eye Syndrome: Identification and Targeting of Oxylipin-Mediated Mechanisms
title Inflammation in Dry Eye Syndrome: Identification and Targeting of Oxylipin-Mediated Mechanisms
title_full Inflammation in Dry Eye Syndrome: Identification and Targeting of Oxylipin-Mediated Mechanisms
title_fullStr Inflammation in Dry Eye Syndrome: Identification and Targeting of Oxylipin-Mediated Mechanisms
title_full_unstemmed Inflammation in Dry Eye Syndrome: Identification and Targeting of Oxylipin-Mediated Mechanisms
title_short Inflammation in Dry Eye Syndrome: Identification and Targeting of Oxylipin-Mediated Mechanisms
title_sort inflammation in dry eye syndrome: identification and targeting of oxylipin-mediated mechanisms
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7555241/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32932827
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines8090344
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