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Título
Analysis of the mucosal chemokines CCL28, CXCL14, and CXCL17 in dry eye disease: An in vitro and clinical investigation
Autor
Año del Documento
2024
Editorial
Elsevier
Descripción
Producción Científica
Documento Fuente
Experimental Eye Research, 2024, vol. 241, 109854
Résumé
Mucosal chemokines have antimicrobial properties and play an important role in mucosal immunity. However, little is known about their expression on the ocular surface. This study aimed to analyze the expression of the mucosal chemokines CCL28, CXCL14 and CXCL17 in corneal and conjunctival epithelial cells under in vitro dry eye (DE) conditions, and in conjunctival samples from healthy subjects and DE patients. Human corneal
epithelial cells (HCE) and immortalized human conjunctival epithelial cells (IM-ConEpiC) were incubated under hyperosmolar (400–500 mOsM) or inflammatory (TNF-α 25 ng/mL) conditions for 6 h and 24 h to measure CCL28, CXCL14, and CXCL17 gene expression by RT-PCR and their secretion by immunobead-based analysis (CCL28, CXCL14) and ELISA (CXCL17). Additionally, twenty-seven DE patients and 13 healthy subjects were
included in this study. DE-related questionnaires (OSDI, mSIDEQ and NRS) evaluated symptomatology. Ocular surface integrity was assessed using vital staining. Tactile sensitivity was measured with Cochet-Bonnet esthesiometer, and mechanic and thermal (heat and cold) sensitivity using Belmonte’s non-contact esthesiometer. Subbasal nerve plexus and dendritic cell density were analyzed by in vivo confocal microscopy. Conjunctival cells from participants were collected by impression cytology to measure mucosal chemokines gene expression by RTPCR. Our results showed that HCE and IM-HConEpiC cells increased CCL28, CXCL14, and CXCL17 secretion under hyperosmolar conditions. The gene expression of CCL28 was significantly upregulated in conjunctival
samples from DE patients. CCL28 expression correlated positively with symptomatology, corneal staining, heat sensitivity threshold, and dendritic cell density. CXCL14 expression correlated positively with age, ocular pain, conjunctival staining, tactile sensitivity, and image reflectivity. CXCL17 expression correlated positively with corneal staining. These results suggest that corneal and conjunctival epithelial cells could be a source of CCL28,
CXCL14, and CXCL17 on the ocular surface and that CCL28 might be involved in DE pathogenesis.
Materias Unesco
2403 Bioquímica
2410 Biología Humana
2412 Inmunología
2415 Biología Molecular
3299 Otras Especialidades Médicas
Palabras Clave
Ocular surface
Dry eye
Mucosal chemokines
Hyperosmolarity
Inflammation
CCL28
CXCL14
CXCL17
ISSN
00144835
Revisión por pares
SI
Patrocinador
Este trabajo forma parte de los proyectos de investigación: SAF-2016-77080-P, financiado por MICIU/AEI /10.13039/501100011033/ y por FEDER Una manera de hacer Europa; por proyecto PID 2022-142578OB-I00, financiado por MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 y por FEDER, UE; y por grant SECTEI/160/ 2021 fianciado por Ministerio de Educacion, Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación de Ciudad de Méjico (SECTEI).
Version del Editor
Propietario de los Derechos
© 2024 The Authors
Idioma
eng
Tipo de versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Derechos
openAccess
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