| Literature DB >> 27110252 |
Fei Li1, Shao-Zhen Zhao1.
Abstract
Angiogenesis is beneficial in the treatment of ischemic heart disease and peripheral artery disease. However, it facilitates inflammatory cell filtration and inflammation cascade that disrupt the immune and angiogenesis privilege of the avascular cornea, resulting in ocular surface diseases and even vision loss. Although great progress has been achieved, healing of severe ocular surface injury and immunosuppression of corneal transplantation are the most difficult and challenging step in the treatment of ocular surface disorders. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), derived from various adult tissues, are able to differentiate into different cell types such as endothelial cells and fat cells. Although it is still under debate whether MSCs could give rise to functional corneal cells, recent results from different study groups showed that MSCs could improve corneal disease recovery through suppression of inflammation and modulation of immune cells. Thus, MSCs could become a promising tool for ocular surface disorders. In this review, we discussed how angiogenesis and inflammation are orchestrated in the pathogenesis of ocular surface disease. We overviewed and updated the knowledge of MSCs and then summarized the therapeutic potential of MSCs via control of angiogenesis, inflammation, and immune response in the treatment of ocular surface disease.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27110252 PMCID: PMC4823508 DOI: 10.1155/2016/7961816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Modulation of immune cells and inflammatory cells by MSCs in corneal surface diseases. Cornea is the avascular and transparent front part of the eye, maintained by immune and angiogenesis privilege. In the occurrence of injury and transplantation, ingrowth of blood and lymph vessels into the cornea leads to infiltration of inflammatory cells and Th1 cells, which strengthen the inflammation and damage the cornea structure. MSCs have several protective functions by (1) inhibition of the inflammatory cell infiltration and inflammatory cytokine release, (2) activation of Treg cells for immune tolerance, (3) tuning the transition from Th1 cells toward Th2 cells, and (4) improving epithelium regeneration (not shown).
Experiments of MSCs in ocular surface diseases.
| Diseases | Experimental outcomes | The mechanisms | Factors | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical injury | Reduce corneal opacity | Reduce inflammation and neovascularization | ↑ TSG-6 | [ |
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| Chemical injury | Protect the corneal surface | Reduce inflammation and neovascularization | ↑ IL-10, IL-6, TSP-1, and TGF- | [ |
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| Alkali burn | Improve wound healing | Enhance the recovery of corneal epithelium | ↓ MIP-1 | [ |
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| Chemical burn | Restructure damaged corneal surface | Inhibit inflammation and angiogenesis | ↓ IL-2 and MMP-2 | [ |
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| Chemical burn | Affect profiling of IL-17-secreting cells | Mainly modulate non-Th17 cells and partially suppress Th17 cells | ↓ IL-17 | [ |
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| Corneal allotransplantation | Prolong grafts survival | Inhibit immune response | ↑ TSG-6 | [ |
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| Corneal allotransplantation | Prolong grafts survival | Prevent T-cells response | ↑ IL-10 and IL-4 | [ |
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| Corneal allotransplantation | Prolong grafts survival | Reduce NK cells infiltration | ↓ IL-6, IL-1 | [ |
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| DES | Protect ocular surface | Reduce the CD4+ T cells | [ | |
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| Dry eye secondary to chronic GVHD | Reduce clinical symptoms and improve dry eye scores | Increase the CD8+CD28− T cells | [ | |
TSG-6: TNF-α-stimulated gene/protein 6; MMP: metal matrix proteinase; CNV: cornea new vessel; TSP-1: thrombospondin-1; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor-α; MIP-1α: macrophage inflammatory protein-1α; IFN-γ: interferon-γ; VEGF: vascular epithelial growth factor; DES: dry eye syndrome; GVHD: graft-versus-host disease; APCs: antigen-presenting cells.