ABSTRACT
The corneal wound healing response, including the development of stromal opacity in some eyes, is a process that often leads to scarring that occurs after injury, surgery or infection to the cornea. Immediately after epithelial and stromal injury, a complex sequence of processes contributes to wound repair and regeneration of normal corneal structure and function. In some corneas, however, often depending on the type and extent of injury, the response may also lead to the development of mature vimentin+ α-smooth muscle actin+ desmin+ myofibroblasts. Myofibroblasts are specialized fibroblastic cells generated in the cornea from keratocyte-derived or bone marrow-derived precursor cells. The disorganized extracellular matrix components secreted by myofibroblasts, in addition to decreased expression of corneal crystallins in these cells, are central biological processes that result in corneal stromal fibrosis associated with opacity or "haze". Several factors are associated with myofibroblast generation and haze development after PRK surgery in rabbits, a reproducible model of scarring, including the amount of tissue ablated, which may relate to the extent of keratocyte apoptosis in the early response to injury, irregularity of stromal surface after surgery, and changes in corneal stromal proteoglycans, but normal regeneration of the epithelial basement membrane (EBM) appears to be a critical factor determining whether a cornea heals with relative transparency or vision-limiting stromal opacity. Structural and functional abnormalities of the regenerated EBM facilitate prolonged entry of epithelium-derived growth factors such as transforming growth factor ß (TGF-ß) and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) into the stroma that both drive development of mature myofibroblasts from precursor cells and lead to persistence of the cells in the anterior stroma. A major discovery that has contributed to our understanding of haze development is that keratocytes and corneal fibroblasts produce critical EBM components, such as nidogen-1, nidogen-2 and perlecan, that are essential for complete regeneration of a normal EBM once laminin secreted by epithelial cells self-polymerizes into a nascent EBM. Mature myofibroblasts that become established in the anterior stroma are a barrier to keratocyte/corneal fibroblast contributions to the nascent EBM. These myofibroblasts, and the opacity they produce, often persist for months or years after the injury. Transparency is subsequently restored when the EBM is completely regenerated, myofibroblasts are deprived of TGFß and undergo apoptosis, and the keratocytes re-occupy the anterior stroma and reabsorb disordered extracellular matrix. The aim of this review is to highlight factors involved in the generation of stromal haze and its subsequent removal.
Subject(s)
Corneal Injuries/pathology , Corneal Opacity/pathology , Corneal Stroma/pathology , Epithelium, Corneal/pathology , Animals , Apoptosis/physiology , Basement Membrane/pathology , Corneal Injuries/metabolism , Corneal Keratocytes/metabolism , Corneal Opacity/metabolism , Corneal Opacity/physiopathology , Extracellular Matrix Proteins/metabolism , Humans , Myofibroblasts/metabolism , Myofibroblasts/pathology , Wound Healing/physiologyABSTRACT
The epithelial basement membrane (BM) is a specialized extracellular matrix that has been shown to have a critical role in corneal development, wound healing, and disease. Although the epithelial BM contributes to corneal homeostasis, relatively little is know about non-epithelial production of its components that may be important in defective regeneration of the epithelial basement membrane associated with opacity after photorefractive keratectomy. The purpose of the current study was to investigate stromal production of corneal epithelial BM proteins in wounded human corneas using immunohistochemistry. A total of five unwounded control eyes and five 30-min epithelial-wounded corneas were obtained from fresh corneoscleral buttons removed from human eyes enucleated due to choroidal melanoma with normal anterior segments. In the wounded corneas, an eight mm patch of central corneal epithelium and epithelial BM was removed with a Beaver blade when the patient was under general anesthesia. Immunohistochemical analyses were performed to detect perlecan and nidogen-2 proteins-important components of the epithelial BM lamina lucida and lamina densa zones. Perlecan and nidogen-2 proteins were detected in the BM itself and at low levels in keratocytes in all unwounded corneas. After epithelial injury, both perlecan and nidogen-2 were expressed at high levels in stromal keratocytes, including superficial keratocytes in the early phases of apoptosis. Thus, after epithelial and epithelial BM injury, stromal keratocytes contribute important perlecan and nidogen-2 components to the regenerating epithelial BM.