Title: No financial conflict of interests
1Evaluation of Human-Derived Feeder Layers for Ex
Vivo Cultivation of Corneal and Oral Epithelium
for Ocular Surface Reconstruction
Sandhya M. Sharma, Thomas Fuchsluger, Reza Dana,
Ula Jurkunas Schepens Eye Research Institute,
Department of Ophthalmology, Harvard Medical
School, Boston MA. sandhya.sharma_at_schepens.harvar
d.edu
- No financial conflict of interests
2INTRODUCTION
- Ocular surface damage caused by infections,
chemical burns, trauma, and various autoimmune
diseases could lead to corneal limbal stem cell
deficiency (LSCD). - Depletion of limbal stem cell causes corneal
neovascularization, scarring, chronic
inflammation, and loss of vision. - Current treatments for this condition involve
transplanting cornea from cadaver donor or
transplanting limbal stem cells from the
contralateral eye. These transplants subject the
patients to lifelong immunosuppression (if
allogeneic) and could risk causing LSCD in the
donor eye (if autologous). - In this study we investigated the use of ex vivo
cultivated stem cells from autologous tissue such
as the oral mucosa and the limbus as a potential
source of epithelium for corneal transplantation.
We evaluated the use of different types of feeder
layers of human origin to support stem cell
growth, which would eliminate the risks
associated with using xenogeneic mouse 3T3 feeder
cells that are currently used for propagation
stem cells.
3METHODS
- Oral and limbal epithelial cells were isolated by
microdissection followed by digestion with
dispase and trypsin/EDTA - The cells were seeded on amniotic membrane and
co-cultured for three weeks with - - human dermal fibroblast
- - human bone marrow fibroblast
- - mouse 3T3 fibroblast feeder layers, and
- - no feeder layer
- The cultivated cells were examined by
immunohistochemistry for differentiated (CK3) and
putative stem cell markers (Iß1) -
- These epithelial cells were then examined for
their colony forming efficiency (CFE) - Relative transcripts levels of putative stem cell
markers ABCG2 and p63 were accessed by
quantitative RT-PCR. - All the results were compared to similar
examination of cells co-cultured with mouse 3T3
fibroblasts.
4RESULTS
Cytokeratin-3 Expression in Corneal Limbal Cells
IHC PI / CK-3
No feeder
3T3 Fibroblast
Dermal Fibroblast
Bone Marrow Fibroblast
Quantification of pixels
pixel
Isotype control
5RESULTS
Integrin-ß1 Expression in Corneal Limbal cells
IHC PI / Integrin-ß1
Quantification of pixels
Isotype control
6RESULTS
Cytokeratin-3 Expression in Oral cells
IHC PI / CK-3
No feeder
3T3 Fibroblast
Dermal Fibroblast
Bone Marrow Fibroblast
Quantification of pixels
Isotype control
7RESULTS
Integrin-ß1 Expression in Oral cells
IHC PI / Integrin-ß1
No feeder
3T3 Fibroblast
Dermal Fibroblast
Bone Marrow Fibroblast
Quantification of pixels
pixel
Isotype control
8RESULTS
Comparison of Colony Forming Efficiency in
cultivated cells
Oral cells
Limbal cells
9RESULTS
Comparison of mRNA level of p63 and ABCG2 in
limbal cells
p63
ABCG2
10RESULTS
Comparison of mRNA level of p63 and ABCG2 in oral
cells
p63
ABCG2
11CONCLUSION
- Stratified epithelial sheets of oral and limbal
epithelium expressing putative stem cell and
corneal epithelial markers were successfully
cultured on amniotic membrane with human-derived
feeder layers. - Dermal fibroblast feeder seemed to preserve stem
cell like phenotype of epithelial cells, which
was comparable to cells grown on 3T3 feeder
layer. - Human dermal fibroblast feeder layer may be used
as a substitute for the cultivation of
transplantable epithelial, as minimizing the use
of animal-derived products may make these cell
sheets suitable for human transplantation.
12FUNDING
Massachusetts Lions Eye Research Fund (UJ)
New England Cornea Transplantation Fund
(UJ)Cornea Transplantation Research Fund (UJ and
RD)