| Literature DB >> 25030175 |
Hong Ouyang1, Yuanchao Xue2, Ying Lin1, Xiaohui Zhang3, Lei Xi1, Sherrina Patel4, Huimin Cai5, Jing Luo4, Meixia Zhang6, Ming Zhang6, Yang Yang3, Gen Li6, Hairi Li2, Wei Jiang6, Emily Yeh4, Jonathan Lin4, Michelle Pei4, Jin Zhu4, Guiqun Cao6, Liangfang Zhang7, Benjamin Yu8, Shaochen Chen7, Xiang-Dong Fu9, Yizhi Liu10, Kang Zhang11.
Abstract
The surface of the cornea consists of a unique type of non-keratinized epithelial cells arranged in an orderly fashion, and this is essential for vision by maintaining transparency for light transmission. Cornea epithelial cells (CECs) undergo continuous renewal from limbal stem or progenitor cells (LSCs), and deficiency in LSCs or corneal epithelium--which turns cornea into a non-transparent, keratinized skin-like epithelium--causes corneal surface disease that leads to blindness in millions of people worldwide. How LSCs are maintained and differentiated into corneal epithelium in healthy individuals and which key molecular events are defective in patients have been largely unknown. Here we report establishment of an in vitro feeder-cell-free LSC expansion and three-dimensional corneal differentiation protocol in which we found that the transcription factors p63 (tumour protein 63) and PAX6 (paired box protein PAX6) act together to specify LSCs, and WNT7A controls corneal epithelium differentiation through PAX6. Loss of WNT7A or PAX6 induces LSCs into skin-like epithelium, a critical defect tightly linked to common human corneal diseases. Notably, transduction of PAX6 in skin epithelial stem cells is sufficient to convert them to LSC-like cells, and upon transplantation onto eyes in a rabbit corneal injury model, these reprogrammed cells are able to replenish CECs and repair damaged corneal surface. These findings suggest a central role of the WNT7A-PAX6 axis in corneal epithelial cell fate determination, and point to a new strategy for treating corneal surface diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25030175 PMCID: PMC4610745 DOI: 10.1038/nature13465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962