Abstract
Tissue-engineered corneal epithelium transplantation is effective treatment for severe limbal stem cell deficiency (LSCD), while epithelial terminal differentiation, tans-differentiation, and insufficient stem cell during construction affect the quality of tissue-engineered corneal epithelium. In this study, we applied SB203580 in the culture medium to downregulate the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathway during construction of tissue-engineered corneal epithelium. With application of SB203580, tissue-engineered corneal epithelium showed enhanced strength and condensed structure. The expression of progenitor cell markers ATP-binding cassette sub-family G member 2, tumor protein p63, keratin 14, and Wnt family member 7A was increased, differentiation markers keratin 12, paired box 6, keratin 10, and keratin 13 and trans-differentiation markers actin alpha 2, smooth muscle and snail family transcriptional repressor 1 was decreased, while cell junction markers claudin 1 and cadherin 1 was increased in the tissue-engineered corneal epithelium. The Wnt/catenin beta 1 signaling pathway was upregulated in the epithelium after p38 MAPK inhibition. Transplantation of tissue-engineered corneal epithelium treated with SB203580 to rabbit LSCD model showed faster wound healing and improved epithelial quality. We conclude that downregulation of p38 MAPK signaling pathway helps maintain the stemness and prevent terminal differentiation and abnormal differentiation of corneal epithelial cells during epithelium construction process, and thus can improve the quality of tissue-engineered corneal epithelium.
Impact statement
Downregulation of p38 MAPK signaling pathway helps maintain the self-renewal of limbal stem cells and prevents terminal differentiation and abnormal differentiation of corneal epithelial cells. Small molecules modulating p38 MAPK signaling pathway ameliorate tissue-engineered corneal epithelium.
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