Exosomes from normal and diabetic human corneolimbal keratocytes differentially regulate migration, proliferation and marker expression of limbal epithelial cells

被引:0
作者
Aleksandra Leszczynska
Mangesh Kulkarni
Alexander V. Ljubimov
Mehrnoosh Saghizadeh
机构
[1] Cedars-Sinai Medical Center,Biomedical Sciences
[2] Cedars-Sinai Medical Center,Regenerative Medicine Institute Eye Program
[3] University of California Los Angeles,David Geffen School of Medicine
来源
Scientific Reports | / 8卷
关键词
Exosomes; Keratocytes; Limbal Epithelial Stem Cells (LESC); Organ-cultured Corneas; Diabetic Corneas;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Limbal epithelial stem cells (LESC) maintenance requires communication between stem cells and neighboring stromal keratocytes. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are important for intercellular communication in various stem cell niches. We explored the regulatory roles of limbal stromal cell (LSC)-derived exosomes (Exos), an EV sub-population, in limbal epithelial cells (LEC) in normal and diabetic limbal niche and determined differences in Exo cargos from normal and diabetic LSC. Wound healing and proliferation rates in primary normal LEC were significantly enhanced upon treatment by normal Exos (N-Exos), but not by diabetic Exos (DM-Exos). Western analysis showed increased Akt phosphorylation in wounded LECs and organ-cultured corneas treated with N-Exos, compared to untreated wounded cells and DM-Exos treated fellow corneas, respectively. N-Exos treated organ-cultured corneas showed upregulation of putative LESC markers, keratin 15 (K15) and Frizzled-7, compared to the DM-Exos treated fellow corneas. By next generation sequencing, we identified differentially expressed small RNAs including microRNAs in DM-Exos vs. N-Exos. Overall, N-Exos have greater effect on LEC proliferation and wound healing than DM-Exos, likely by activating Akt signaling. The small RNA differences in Exos from diabetic vs. normal LSC could contribute to the disease state. Our study suggests that exosomes may serve as novel therapeutic tools for diabetic cornea.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 129 条
[1]  
Davanger M(1971)Role of the pericorneal papillary structure in renewal of corneal epithelium Nature. 229 560-561
[2]  
Evensen A(2005)Limbal epithelial crypts: a novel anatomical structure and a putative limbal stem cell niche Br. J. Ophthalmol. 89 529-532
[3]  
Dua HS(2007)Characterization of the limbal epithelial stem cell niche: novel imaging techniques permit Stem Cells. 25 1402-1409
[4]  
Shanmuganathan VA(2013) observation and targeted biopsy of limbal epithelial stem cells Acta Ophthalmol. 91 457-462
[5]  
Powell-Richards AO(2007)Interactive 3D computer model of the human corneolimbal region: crypts, projections and stem cells Cell Res. 17 26-36
[6]  
Tighe PJ(1995)Niche regulation of corneal epithelial stem cells at the limbus J Cell Physiol. 163 61-79
[7]  
Joseph A(2013)Three patterns of cytokine expression potentially involved in epithelial fibroblast interactions of human ocular surface Stem Cell Res. 10 147-155
[8]  
Shortt AJ(2014)Aquaporin 1-positive stromal niche-like cells directly interact with N-cadherin-positive clusters in the basal limbal epithelium PLoS One. 9 e94283-5135
[9]  
Molvaer RK(2014)Localisation of epithelial cells capable of holoclone formation Sci Transl Med. 6 266ra172-659
[10]  
Li W(2003) and direct interaction with stromal cells in the native human limbal crypt Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 44 5130-642