Changes in Epithelial and Stromal Corneal Stiffness Occur with Age and Obesity

The cornea is avascular, which makes it an excellent model to study matrix protein expression and tissue stiffness. The corneal epithelium adheres to the basement zone and the underlying stroma is composed of keratocytes and an extensive matrix of collagen and proteoglycans. Our goal was to examine...

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Main Authors: Peiluo Xu, Anne Londregan, Celeste Rich, Vickery Trinkaus-Randall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-02-01
Series:Bioengineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5354/7/1/14
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spelling doaj-b50be04b697f4933b949e9f618640aab2020-11-25T03:37:03ZengMDPI AGBioengineering2306-53542020-02-01711410.3390/bioengineering7010014bioengineering7010014Changes in Epithelial and Stromal Corneal Stiffness Occur with Age and ObesityPeiluo Xu0Anne Londregan1Celeste Rich2Vickery Trinkaus-Randall3Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, Boston, MA 02115, USADepartment of Biochemistry/Molecular Biology, Boston University, Boston, MA 02215, USADepartment of Biochemistry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02115, USADepartment of Biochemistry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02115, USAThe cornea is avascular, which makes it an excellent model to study matrix protein expression and tissue stiffness. The corneal epithelium adheres to the basement zone and the underlying stroma is composed of keratocytes and an extensive matrix of collagen and proteoglycans. Our goal was to examine changes in corneas of 8- and 15-week mice and compare them to 15-week pre-Type 2 diabetic obese mouse. Nanoindentation was performed on corneal epithelium in situ and then the epithelium was abraded, and the procedure repeated on the basement membrane and stroma. Confocal imaging was performed to examine the localization of proteins. Stiffness was found to be age and obesity dependent. Young’s modulus was greater in the epithelium from 15-week mice compared to 8-week mice. At 15 weeks, the epithelium of the control was significantly greater than that of the obese mice. There was a difference in the localization of Crb3 and PKCζ in the apical epithelium and a lack of lamellipodial extensions in the obese mouse. In the pre-Type 2 diabetic obese mouse there was a difference in the stiffness slope and after injury localization of fibronectin was negligible. These indicate that age and environmental changes incurred by diet alter the integrity of the tissue with age rendering it stiffer. The corneas from the pre-Type 2 diabetic obese mice were significantly softer and this may be a result of changes both in proteins on the apical surface indicating a lack of integrity and a decrease in fibronectin.https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5354/7/1/14basement membraneconfocal imagingnanoindenterpre-type 2 diabetic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peiluo Xu
Anne Londregan
Celeste Rich
Vickery Trinkaus-Randall
spellingShingle Peiluo Xu
Anne Londregan
Celeste Rich
Vickery Trinkaus-Randall
Changes in Epithelial and Stromal Corneal Stiffness Occur with Age and Obesity
Bioengineering
basement membrane
confocal imaging
nanoindenter
pre-type 2 diabetic
author_facet Peiluo Xu
Anne Londregan
Celeste Rich
Vickery Trinkaus-Randall
author_sort Peiluo Xu
title Changes in Epithelial and Stromal Corneal Stiffness Occur with Age and Obesity
title_short Changes in Epithelial and Stromal Corneal Stiffness Occur with Age and Obesity
title_full Changes in Epithelial and Stromal Corneal Stiffness Occur with Age and Obesity
title_fullStr Changes in Epithelial and Stromal Corneal Stiffness Occur with Age and Obesity
title_full_unstemmed Changes in Epithelial and Stromal Corneal Stiffness Occur with Age and Obesity
title_sort changes in epithelial and stromal corneal stiffness occur with age and obesity
publisher MDPI AG
series Bioengineering
issn 2306-5354
publishDate 2020-02-01
description The cornea is avascular, which makes it an excellent model to study matrix protein expression and tissue stiffness. The corneal epithelium adheres to the basement zone and the underlying stroma is composed of keratocytes and an extensive matrix of collagen and proteoglycans. Our goal was to examine changes in corneas of 8- and 15-week mice and compare them to 15-week pre-Type 2 diabetic obese mouse. Nanoindentation was performed on corneal epithelium in situ and then the epithelium was abraded, and the procedure repeated on the basement membrane and stroma. Confocal imaging was performed to examine the localization of proteins. Stiffness was found to be age and obesity dependent. Young’s modulus was greater in the epithelium from 15-week mice compared to 8-week mice. At 15 weeks, the epithelium of the control was significantly greater than that of the obese mice. There was a difference in the localization of Crb3 and PKCζ in the apical epithelium and a lack of lamellipodial extensions in the obese mouse. In the pre-Type 2 diabetic obese mouse there was a difference in the stiffness slope and after injury localization of fibronectin was negligible. These indicate that age and environmental changes incurred by diet alter the integrity of the tissue with age rendering it stiffer. The corneas from the pre-Type 2 diabetic obese mice were significantly softer and this may be a result of changes both in proteins on the apical surface indicating a lack of integrity and a decrease in fibronectin.
topic basement membrane
confocal imaging
nanoindenter
pre-type 2 diabetic
url https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5354/7/1/14
work_keys_str_mv AT peiluoxu changesinepithelialandstromalcornealstiffnessoccurwithageandobesity
AT annelondregan changesinepithelialandstromalcornealstiffnessoccurwithageandobesity
AT celesterich changesinepithelialandstromalcornealstiffnessoccurwithageandobesity
AT vickerytrinkausrandall changesinepithelialandstromalcornealstiffnessoccurwithageandobesity
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