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Browsing by Subject "Limbal stem cells"
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Item Schwann Cells Are Key Regulators of Corneal Epithelial Renewal(Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO), 2023) Mirmoeini, Kaveh; Tajdaran, Kiana; Zhang, Jennifer; Gordon, Tessa; Ali, Asim; Kaplan, David R.; Feinberg, Konstantin; Borschel, Gregory H.; Surgery, School of MedicinePurpose: Corneal sensory nerves protect the cornea from injury. They are also thought to stimulate limbal stem cells (LSCs) to produce transparent epithelial cells constantly, enabling vision. In other organs, Schwann cells (SCs) associated with tissue-innervating axon terminals mediate tissue regeneration. This study defines the critical role of the corneal axon-ensheathing SCs in homeostatic and regenerative corneal epithelial cell renewal. Methods: SC localization in the cornea was determined by in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry with SC markers. In vivo SC visualization and/or ablation were performed in mice with inducible corneal SC-specific expression of tdTomato and/or Diphtheria toxin, respectively. The relative locations of SCs and LSCs were observed with immunohistochemical analysis of harvested genetically SC-prelabeled mouse corneas with LSC-specific antibodies. The correlation between cornea-innervating axons and the appearance of SCs was ascertained using corneal denervation in rats. To determine the limbal niche cellular composition and gene expression changes associated with innervation-dependent epithelial renewal, single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) of dissociated healthy, de-epithelized, and denervated cornea limbi was performed. Results: We observed limbal enrichment of corneal axon-associated myelinating and non-myelinating SCs. Induced local genetic ablation of SCs, although leaving corneal sensory innervation intact, markedly inhibited corneal epithelial renewal. scRNA-seq analysis (1) highlighted the transcriptional heterogenicity of cells populating the limbal niche, and (2) identified transcriptional changes associated with corneal innervation and during wound healing that model potential regulatory paracrine interactions between SCs and LSCs. Conclusions: Limbal SCs are required for innervation-dependent corneal epithelial renewal.Item The Role of Sensory Innervation in Homeostatic and Injury-Induced Corneal Epithelial Renewal(MDPI, 2023-08-09) Feinberg, Konstantin; Tajdaran, Kiana; Mirmoeini, Kaveh; Daeschler, Simeon C.; Henriquez, Mario A.; Stevens, Katelyn E.; Mulenga, Chilando M.; Hussain, Arif; Hamrah, Pedram; Ali, Asim; Gordon, Tessa; Borschel, Gregory H.; Surgery, School of MedicineThe cornea is the window through which we see the world. Corneal clarity is required for vision, and blindness occurs when the cornea becomes opaque. The cornea is covered by unique transparent epithelial cells that serve as an outermost cellular barrier bordering between the cornea and the external environment. Corneal sensory nerves protect the cornea from injury by triggering tearing and blink reflexes, and are also thought to regulate corneal epithelial renewal via unknown mechanism(s). When protective corneal sensory innervation is absent due to infection, trauma, intracranial tumors, surgery, or congenital causes, permanent blindness results from repetitive epithelial microtraumas and failure to heal. The condition is termed neurotrophic keratopathy (NK), with an incidence of 5:10,000 people worldwide. In this report, we review the currently available therapeutic solutions for NK and discuss the progress in our understanding of how the sensory nerves induce corneal epithelial renewal.