Literature DB >> 23588968

Functions of corneal endothelial cells do not change after uptake of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles.

Yan-Long Bi1, Ming-Feng Wu, Li-Xia Lu, Qi Zhou, Fei Du, Xiao-Ting Sun, Sen-Fei Tang, Guo-Tong Xu.   

Abstract

To avoid donor tissue shortages, ex vivo cultured human corneal endothelial cell (HCEC) transplantation is a promising therapeutic resource. Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticle (SPION) cell labeling assists HCEC transplantation by attaching the posterior corneal stroma in ex vivo animal models. However, possible functional changes of the HCECs following SPION labeling remain to be determined. In this study, we used SPIONs to label cultured rabbit CECs (RCECs) in order to observe important cell functions and the levels of cell markers. The synthetic SPIONs exhibited superparamagnetism at room temperature, with saturation magnetization of 55.4 emu/g and negligible remanence or coercivity. The ζ-potential was -24.5 mV and the diameter was 101 ± 55 nm. Immunostaining demonstrated a normal density of zonula occluden-1 (ZO-1), nestin and Ki-67 at cellular junctions or in nuclei from RCECs following SPION labeling at 16 µg/ml. MTT cytotoxicity assay, homotypic adhesion assay, quantitative flow cytometric Ki-67 analysis and RCEC pump function measurement demonstrated no significant differences between the cells with or without SPION labeling (P<0.05, for all assays). Results of this study demonstrated successful labeled cultured RCECs with synthetic SPIONs. Labeled cells possessed several important characteristics required to maintain the transparency and refractive parameters of the cornea, including hexagonal cell morphology, higher cell adhesion ability and proliferative potential, cell pump function and the positive expression of several cell markers.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23588968     DOI: 10.3892/mmr.2013.1418

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Med Rep        ISSN: 1791-2997            Impact factor:   2.952


  4 in total

1.  Targeted transplantation of human umbilical cord blood endothelial progenitor cells with immunomagnetic nanoparticles to repair corneal endothelium defect.

Authors:  Chunyi Shao; Junzhao Chen; Ping Chen; Mengyu Zhu; Qinke Yao; Ping Gu; Yao Fu; Xianqun Fan
Journal:  Stem Cells Dev       Date:  2014-12-17       Impact factor: 3.272

Review 2.  [Novel concepts for treatment of the corneal endothelium with nanoparticles].

Authors:  Thomas A Fuchsluger
Journal:  Ophthalmologe       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 1.059

3.  Magnetic field-guided cell delivery with nanoparticle-loaded human corneal endothelial cells.

Authors:  Stavros N Moysidis; Karen Alvarez-Delfin; Veronica J Peschansky; Enrique Salero; Alejandra D Weisman; Alena Bartakova; Gabriella A Raffa; Richard M Merkhofer; Karl E Kador; Noelia J Kunzevitzky; Jeffrey L Goldberg
Journal:  Nanomedicine       Date:  2015-01-14       Impact factor: 5.307

Review 4.  Metallic Engineered Nanomaterials and Ocular Toxicity: A Current Perspective.

Authors:  Krista M Cosert; Soohyun Kim; Iman Jalilian; Maggie Chang; Brooke L Gates; Kent E Pinkerton; Laura S Van Winkle; Vijay Krishna Raghunathan; Brian C Leonard; Sara M Thomasy
Journal:  Pharmaceutics       Date:  2022-05-03       Impact factor: 6.525

  4 in total

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