(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2000;41:1045-1053.)
© 2000
by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
Disruption of the Basement Membrane after Corneal Débridement
Drina D. Sta. Iglesia1 and
Mary Ann Stepp1,2
1 From the Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology and the
2 Department of Ophthalmology, The George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC.
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Abstract
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PURPOSE. To determine whether the native basement membrane left behind after
manual débridement wounding is retained throughout healing in the
Balb/c mouse.
METHODS. Mouse corneas were subjected to either 1.5 mm (small) or
limbus-to-limbus (large) epithelial débridement wounds and
allowed to heal for times ranging from 12 hours to 3 days. For the
larger wounds, care was taken to leave an approximately 0.5-mm zone of
epithelial cells near the limbal border. Unwounded corneas served as
control specimens. At each time point, confocal immunofluorescence
microscopy was used to localize several proteins found in the basement
membrane including laminin-5, entactin, and perlecan. In addition,
ultrastructural studies were performed using transmission electron
microscopy (TEM) to assess the basement membrane zone (BMZ) of the
corneas at various times after injury.
RESULTS. The smaller (1.5-mm) wounds healed within 24 hours, and
the larger wounds healed at approximately 48 hours. Both wound sizes
healed with little scarring or neovascularization. At all time points
after 1.5-mm wounding, immunofluorescence confocal microscopy and TEM
showed that both basement membrane proteins and the lamina densa were
retained at the BMZ throughout healing. For the larger wounds, at time
points after 24 hours, confocal microscopy showed patches along the
denuded corneal stroma where there was a partial or complete loss of
basement membrane markers at the BMZ. TEM confirmed that the lamina
densa was partly or completely absent along the anterior surface of the
exposed cornea at time points of more than 24 hours after the larger
wounds.
CONCLUSIONS. The denuded epithelial basement membrane was shown to be partially
disassembled in response to manual débridement wounds when
re-epithelialization took more than 24 hours. Regulated disassembly of
the epithelial basement membrane probably plays a role in the healing
of large-diameter débridement wounds.
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Introduction
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Studies of corneal wound healing after manual débridement
were first conducted more than 30 years ago and have been shown by
numerous groups to leave the lamina densa of the basement membrane
intact and in its native state after wounding.1
2
3
4
5
Based
on previous studies,6
7
we know that the mouse cornea
re-epithelializes after manual débridement between 20 to 24 hours
in the 8-week-old Balb/c mouse after wounds removing no more than 40%
of the epithelial surface (1.5 mm; small wounds). Re-epithelialization
of small wounds is accompanied by increased expression of
6ß4
integrin,8
a structural component of the hemidesmosomes
and a signaling molecule known to regulate epithelial cell
proliferation.9
10
11
Extracellular ligands for
6ß4
integrin are members of the laminin family of adhesive glycoproteins,
primarily laminin-1 and -5. Laminin-5 is a component of the anchoring
filaments of hemidesmosome adhesion complexes. It also has been shown
recently to be secreted by migrating epithelial cells in the skin in
response to blisters and deeper, more penetrating wounds12
and by corneal epithelial cells in response to manual keratectomy
wounds.13
Laminin-1 is also a basement membrane
component,14
and studies have shown that both laminin-1
and 5 interactions with
6ß4 can mediate cell
migration.12
15
16
Increased expression of the mRNA and protein for another integrin
9ß1 accompanies re-epithelialization of larger corneal
débridement wounds, but not smaller wounds.7
Unlike
6ß4, the functions of
9ß1 in epithelial cells are unclear. To
determine whether alterations in the nature of the substrate, the
basement membrane zone (BMZ), are associated with the increased
expression of either
6ß4 or
9ß1 observed in response to
corneal débridement wounding, we performed both small and large
débridement wounds and evaluated tissues by immunohistochemistry
for the localization of several different basement membrane proteins at
a variety of different time points after wounding. We also evaluated
the morphology of the corneal epithelial basement membrane directly by
transmission electron microscopy (TEM).
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Materials and Methods
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Animal Model
All experiments described in this article were conducted in
voluntary compliance with the ARVO Statement for the Use of Animals in
Ophthalmic and Vision Research, and all procedures were approved by the
George Washington University (GWU) Animal Care and Use Committee.
Eight- to 10-week-old male Balb/c mice were anesthetized and a topical
anesthetic applied to the ocular surface and the corneas scraped with a
dull scalpel to remove the corneal epithelium within a 1.5-mm central
corneal area demarcated with a trephine (small wound) or from limbus to
limbus, taking care to avoid limbal blood vessels (large wound). This
procedure has been determined previously to leave the basement membrane
intact and nondenatured. The corneas were allowed to heal in vivo for
12, 18, and 24 hours (small wounds) or for 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 6, or 10 days
(large wound). After mice were killed by lethal injection, eyes were
enucleated and corneas dissected and frozen in O.C.T. embedding medium
(Tissue Tek II; Laboratory Tek, Napierville, IL) for fluorescence
immunohistochemistry or fixed in half-strength Karnovsky fixative for
TEM.17
Immunohistochemical Analysis
The frozen corneas used for immunofluorescence microscopy were
processed as described previously.7
In brief, the tissues
were sectioned (10 µm) onto poly-L-lysinecoated slides
and stained with primary antibodies to basement membrane markers:
laminin-ß1, laminin-
1, entactin, perlecan (provided by
Alexander Ljubimov, CedarsSinai Medical Center, Los Angeles,
CA), and J18, a polyclonal sera raised against basement membrane that
has been shown to recognize primarily laminin-5 but may also react
against laminin-6 and -7 (provided by Jonathan C. Jones,
Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, IL). Tissues were
counterstained with the appropriate fluorescently labeled secondary
antibody. Sections were viewed either with a fluorescence microscope
(model BX60; Olympus, Lake Success, NY) or with confocal microscopy
(1024 program; Bio-Rad, Cambridge, MA). Control sections incubated
without addition of primary antisera were included in each
immunofluorescence procedure. For each time point, no fewer than three
corneas from three different animals were used.
Electron Microscopy Analysis
The harvested corneas were processed for TEM using a
modified procedure based on methods described in Tisdale et
al.17
and Orenstein et al.18
with further
modifications suggested by Robyn Rufner (Director, GWU Center for
Microscopy and Image Analysis). Tissues were fixed in half-strength
Karnovskys fixative for 1 hour at room temperature and then
transferred to 4°C for storage until use. Specimens were then
postfixed in 2% osmium tetroxide, stained en bloc with 0.5% uranyl
acetate, passed through an alcohol series, and embedded in mounting
compound (Embed 812). Thin sections were then stained with 5%
uranyl acetate and lead citrate and examined on an electron microscope
(model 1200EX; JEOL, Peabody, MA) at x20,000 magnification at 60 kV.
For each time point, at least three corneas from three different
animals were examined.
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Results
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Linear BMZ in Unwounded Corneas
Corneas were stained with a monoclonal antibody to the ß1 chain
found in laminin-1 and -10 (Fig. 1A
), a polyclonal serum that recognizes primarily laminin-5 (Fig. 1B)
,
and a monoclonal antibody against perlecan (Fig. 1C)
and viewed with
immunofluorescence. All three antibodies recognized antigens that are
present within basement membranes. The corneal epithelial BMZ appeared
as a continuous distinct line between the basal surface of the
epithelial basal cells and the anterior stroma. Although the laminin
ß1 chain and perlecan were present in both the epithelial BMZ and
Descemets membrane (Figs. 1A
1C
, arrow), laminin-5 was exclusively
localized to the epithelial BMZ (Fig. 1B
, arrow). Results of entactin
staining were similar to those observed for laminin ß1 and perlecan
(not shown). TEM (Fig. 1D)
revealed contiguous lamina densa and lamina
lucida regions and the presence of numerous hemidesmosomes spaced
regularly along the basement membrane.

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Figure 1. The localization of several extracellular matrix components of
the epithelial basement membrane is continuous in unwounded corneas.
(A) Localization of the laminin ß1 chain, a component of
laminin-1 and -10; (B) localization of the J18 antigen,
which has been shown to be primarily laminin-5; and (C)
localization of perlecan. All three basement membrane markers showed a
linear, continuous staining pattern in the epithelial BMZ in the
unwounded cornea. (A, B, and C,arrows) Location of Descemets membrane and the
corneal endothelial cell layer. Note that J18laminin-5 was not
present at Descemets membrane, whereas the laminin ß1 chain and
perlecan were abundant that this site. (D) Hemidesmosomes
(*) and lamina densa at the BMZ in an unwounded cornea by TEM. Bar
(A, B, and C), 100 µm; (D), 278 nm.
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BMZ Became Discontinuous after Large Wounds
Laminin-5 was localized at and behind the leading edge and on the
denuded BMZ at 12 (Figs. 2A
1B
1C
) or 18 (Figs. 2D
2E
2F) hours after small corneal
débridement wounds. Note that the denuded BMZ still showed
uniform staining for laminin-5, even at 18 hours. The only location
where laminin-5 was not abundant at the BMZ was at the leading edge
(Figs. 2B
2E)
. These confocal microscopy studies reveal that the
denuded BMZ retained the localization of laminin-5 throughout
re-epithelialization when corneas were subjected to small wounds that
closed within 24 hours.

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Figure 2. The localization of J18laminin-5 after small wounds appears
continuous and discrete. Localization of J18laminin-5 behind the
leading edge (A, D), at the leading edge
(B, E), and at the denuded center (C,
F) of mouse corneas at 12 hours (A, B,
and C) and 18 hours (D, E, and
F) after 1.5-mm manual débridement wounds.
(B, E, arrows) Cells at the tip of
the leading edge. Although there was no J18laminin-5 staining beneath
several cells at the leading edge, there was no evidence of a loss of
J18laminin-5 toward the center of the denuded basement membrane. Bar,
80 µm.
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In large wounds we consistently observed discontinuities or an apparent
absence of localization of basement membrane markers at the BMZ in
regions that remained uncovered by epithelial cells at times of more
than 24 hours after injury. Data for laminin-5 are shown in Figure 3
at 24 (Figs. 3A
3B
3C)
and 36 (Figs. 3D
3E
3F
3G
3H)
hours after the
larger wounds. At 24 hours, there were no breaks in the localization of
laminin-5 over the bare stroma (Fig. 3C)
. At the leading edge and
behind the leading edge (Fig. 3B)
there was absent or reduced staining
of laminin-5 overall, consistent with the data presented for the small
wounds (Figs. 2B
2E)
; however, somewhat farther away from the wound
edge (Fig. 3A)
, laminin-5 was localized within the cytoplasm of the
migrating sheet of epithelial cells. The migrating epithelial sheet was
thinner after larger wounds and consisted of only one or two cell
layers.

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Figure 3. The localization of J18laminin-5 at the BMZ in larger wounds became
increasingly discontinuous before wound closure. Localization of
J18laminin-5 behind the leading edge (A, D), at
the leading edge (B, E), and in at the denuded
center (C, F) of mouse corneas at 24 hours
(A, B, and C) and at 36 hours
(D, E, and F) after limbus-to-limbus
manual débridement wounds. (G, H)
Discontinuous localization of laminin-5 at the center of the wound area
36 hours after injury, at slightly higher magnification. (B,
E, arrows) Cells at the tip of the leading
edge. Again, J18laminin-5 staining was absent beneath cells at the
leading edge. (*) Areas of J18laminin-5 loss observed more
frequently at 36 hours of wounding than at 24 hours. Bar (A
through F), 80 µm; (G, H), 50
µm.
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At 36 hours after larger wounds, the epithelium had migrated to
cover more than 80% of the corneal surface. The region of denuded
stroma at the center of wounds at 36 hours began to show loss of
laminin-5 localization at discrete sites along the bare stroma in front
of the leading edge (Figs. 3E
3F)
. Shown at slightly higher
magnification in Figures 3G
and 3H
are examples typical of the
localized loss of laminin-5 staining observed at 36 hours after
wounding. At some sites we saw diffuse staining, whereas at others,
there was no staining for laminin-5.
The primary antigen recognized by the J18 sera used in Figures 2 and 3
was laminin-5, the major structural component of the extracellular
anchoring filaments of hemidesmosomes. In Figure 4 , we show that the localization of entactin and perlecan, additional
components of the basement membrane of the cornea, was also disrupted
36 hours after larger wounds. Figures 4A
4B
4C
4D
show the
localization of entactin at the leading edge and bare central stroma at
18 hours after small wounds (Figs. 4A
4B)
and at 36 hours after larger
wounds (Figs. 4C
4D)
, and Figures 4E 4F
4G
4H
show the localization
of perlecan at the leading edge and bare central stroma at 18 hours
after small wounds (Figs. 4E
4F)
and at 36 hours after larger wounds
(Figs. 4G
4H) . Thus, for laminin-5, entactin, and perlecan,
disruptions of the linear staining pattern at the BMZ were observed at
36 hours but not at 18 hours.

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Figure 4. The localization of entactin and perlecan confirms that the BMZ in
larger wounds becomes discontinuous before wound closure. (A
through D) Localization of entactin; (E through
H) localization of perlecan. Leading edge (A, C)
and denuded center (B, D) of mouse corneas at 18 hours after
1.5-mm smaller wounds (A, B) and at 36 hours
after larger wounds (C, D) stained for entactin.
Leading edge (E, G) and denuded center (F,
H) of mouse corneas at 18 hours after smaller wounds
(E, F) and at 36 hours after larger wounds
(G, H) stained for perlecan.
Arrows: The tip of the leading edge.
Asterisks: Areas without entactin and perlecan were observed
at 36 hours after wounding but not at shorter times. Bar (A
through F), 80 µm; (G, H), 50
µm.
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Taken together, the data presented suggest that over time after
wounding the basement membrane is subject to disassembly. In addition,
Figures 3C and 3E
clearly show that entactin and perlecan were produced
by the migrating epithelial cells. By 3 days after wounding the
immunofluorescence staining profile for these basement membrane
proteins at the epithelial cellstromal interface was again continuous
and discrete (data not shown).
TEM Confirmed Loss of Basement Membrane
The immunofluorescence data suggest that the basement membrane may
be lost when débridement wounds take longer than 24 hours to
close. To determine whether this is the case, TEM studies were
conducted. Presented are TEM data from small (Fig. 5) and large (Fig. 6)
wounds. Data show the BMZ at a region just behind the leading edge but
within the region of active cell movement, the basal surface of a basal
cell migrating at the leading edge of the wound, and the anterior
aspect of the bare stroma at 12 (Figs. 5A
5B
5C
, respectively) and 18
(Figs. 5D 5E
5F
, respectively) hours after the small wound and at 24
(Figs. 6A
6B
6C
, respectively) and 36 (Figs. 6D
6E
and 6F ,
respectively) hours after larger wounds. Higher magnifications of the
bare stroma at 36 hours are presented in 6G and 6H. A continuous,
discrete lamina densa was present behind the leading edge, beneath the
leading edge, and at the denuded anterior stromal surface before
re-epithelialization at 12 and 18 hours after small wounds (Fig. 5)
.
Fragments of basal cell basal membranes can be observed that were left
behind after débridement wounding at 12 hours but not at 18 hours
(Fig. 5C)
. Although there are no mature hemidesmosomes apparent at
either time point, a few small hemidesmosomes were found toward the
limbus (not shown). Compared with 12 hours (Fig. 5C)
, at 18 hours (Fig. 5F) , the exposed lamina densa appeared somewhat thicker but was still
readily apparent. Underneath the cells comprising the leading edge and
behind the leading edge at 12 (Fig. 5A
5B) and 18 hours (Figs. 5D
5F)
an apparent lamina lucida and densa were visible, and epithelial cells
appeared closely associated with the underlying stroma, despite the
absence of mature hemidesmosomes.

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Figure 5. Ultrastructural TEM studies show that the lamina densa was retained
after 1.5-mm wounds. TEM was used to identify the state of assembly of
the basement membrane at various times after 1.5-mm wounds. Areas
behind the leading edge (A, D), cell at the very
tip of the leading edge (B, E), and area at the
denuded center (C, F) of mouse corneas at 12
hours (A, B, and C) and 18 hours
(D, E, and F) after 1.5-mm manual
débridement wounds. Note the maintenance of the lamina densa, an
electron-dense structure at the anterior aspect of the denuded stroma
(C, F) at both 12 and 18 hours after injury. Bar,
290 nm.
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Figure 6. Ultrastructural TEM studies confirm that the BMZ after larger wounds
becomes increasingly discontinuous before wound closure. Areas behind
the leading edge (A, D), at the leading edge
(B, E), and at the denuded center (C,
F) of mouse corneas at 24 hours (A, B,
and C) and at 36 hours (D, E, and
F) after limbus-to-limbus manual débridement wounds.
(G, H) Center of the wounded cornea at 36 hours
after large wounds (similar to F) showing that the BMZ
disassembly, which is substantial, did not affect the entire corneal
surface equally but occurred in patches at intervals across the bare
stroma. Bar, 290 nm.
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At 24 hours after the larger wounds, the lamina densa was still
apparent at the denuded anterior stromal surface (Fig. 6C)
but looked
more disrupted and less discrete than for small wounds at either 12 or
18 hours (Figs. 5C
5F)
. However, by 36 hours the lamina densa was
highly disrupted or completely absent (Figs. 6F
6G
6H) . The longer
stretches of exposed stroma shown in Figures 6G and 6H
demonstrate that
the disassembly of the BMZ was substantial but partial because remnants
of the lamina densa of the basement membrane could still be observed at
some locations at 36 hours. Underneath the cells comprising the leading
edge and behind the leading edge at both 24 and 36 hours after
wounding, adhesion of the epithelial cells to the stroma appeared to
become progressively less tight, suggested by the increased spacing
between the basal cell membrane and the apparent lamina densa observed
just behind the leading edge at 36 hours (Fig. 6D)
compared with
earlier time points (Figs. 5A
5D
6A)
.
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Discussion
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Basal Lamina Disassembled During Healing
Our previous studies of corneal wound healing after
débridement have focused on the leading edge and behind the
leading edge and on the nature of the adhesion complexes formed during
migration.6
8
19
20
In this article, we focus primarily on
the denuded stroma and report that there was no longer a continuous
epithelial basement membrane at the anterior aspect of the mouse cornea
when re-epithelialization took longer than 24 hours. We also show that
abundant entactin and perlecan were produced by epithelial cells during
migration after larger wounds.
Although it has been known for some time that epithelial cells produce
laminin-5, it has been reported by Ekblom et al.21
that
entactin and perlecan are synthesized primarily by mesenchymal cells in
the skin and not by epithelial cells. In the cornea, a rapid loss of
stromal fibroblasts at the anterior stroma has been well documented
after débridement wounding.22
23
Thus, no
mesenchymal cells are available at the anterior stroma to replenish the
entactin and nidogen at the BMZ during re-epithelialization. If corneal
epithelial cells did not synthesize entactin and perlecan themselves, a
delay would be observed before the reappearance of these proteins
within the basement membrane region after the larger wounds. Not only
was no delay observed, but after the larger wounds, both proteins
appeared abundant within the cytoplasm of the cells making up the
single cell-layer migrating sheet (Fig. 4)
. Therefore, entactin, and
perlecan appeared to be upregulated in migrating corneal epithelial
cells at time points when the basement membrane was partially
disassembled.
Based on the data presented and on data found in the literature, we
propose that regulated BMZ disassembly could affect
re-epithelialization in one or more of the following ways:
First, by exposing epithelial cells to underlying stromal
extracellular matrix proteins such as collagen I and/or to new ligands
generated by proteolysis, disassembly of the BMZ may induce new
integrin expression or activation in migrating corneal epithelial
cells. Studies evaluating the function of the
2ß1 integrin have
demonstrated integrin-mediated migration and collagenase I induction in
epidermal keratinocytes exposed to native collagen I but not in cells
adhering to collagenase-I digested collagen or to
gelatin.24
The increase in
9ß1 integrin expression we
have observed previously after larger corneal débridement
wounds7
could be induced by the partial loss of the
epithelial basement membrane.
Second, disassembly of the BMZ may modify intracellular signaling
pathways in migrating epithelial cells. Cytokines such as transforming
growth factor-ß and basic fibroblast growth factor are found in the
BMZ after injury and are held there by binding to molecules in the
matrix, including heparan sulfate proteoglycans.25
26
27
The
partial disassembly of the BMZ could release molecules involved in
modulation of cell proliferation, cell differentiation, and/or
apoptosis.9
28
Third, it could promote the formation of a more stable adhesion
complex. Studies to determine the most effective treatments for
recurrent epithelial erosions have concluded that requiring the
epithelial cells to resynthesize a new basement membrane is one common
parameter in successful treatments of this condition.29
In
addition, Azar et al.30
31
have shown that one of the
hallmarks of the diabetic cornea is its failure to reassemble the
adhesion complex correctly after injury. Ljubimov et al.32
have shown that human diabetic corneas have basement membrane
abnormalities including reduced expression of laminin-1 and -10 and
entactin, and that these losses correlate with reductions in integrin
localization within the epithelial cells. Studies in both animal and
human corneas show that the structure and composition of the epithelial
basement membrane affects the adhesion of the cells sitting on it.
Both TEM and immunofluorescence microscopy have been used to
evaluate the BMZ in healing rabbit corneas.5
Twenty-two
hours after 8.5-mm wounds in the rabbit, the basement membrane was
intact and laminin-1 staining was continuous; data from later time
points were not presented. Larger débridement-type wounds were
made involving removal of all the corneal epithelial cells, the limbal
epithelium, and a 1-mm portion of the conjunctiva. These large wounds
took 1 to 2 weeks to close with conjunctival cells migrating onto the
central cornea. TEM data on such a wound at 36 hours were presented,
and the lamina densa was present; again, later time points were not
presented. Additional ultrastructural studies of the basal lamina after
manual débridement show retention of the lamina densa immediately
after wounding2
4
or at times soon after
wounding1
but do not specifically examine whether this
structure is maintained throughout re-epithelialization over regions of
denuded stroma.
Complicating our studies and those of other groups1
2
3
4
5
6
7
is
that at longer times after injury, the area of the remaining denuded
basal lamina becomes quite small as the wound edges begin to merge. The
migrating cells also deposit the components of the basement membrane as
they migrate, leaving at their basal surface a continuous, lamina
densalike structure. Thinner epithelial sheets at later time points
are prone to breaking off during processing, making discernment of the
leading edge difficult. Despite these complications, inconsistencies
between our results and those of others could also be due to
differences in species used and the types of wounds studied.
Relationship to Epidermal Healing
The re-epithelialization of the skin blister is similar in many
ways to the healing of corneal débridement
wounds.33
34
Kainulainen et al.12
recently
evaluated the expression and localization of the integrins
3ß1 and
6ß4 and their ligand laminin-5 at the leading edge in response to
suction blisters. They showed immunohistochemically that laminin-5 was
retained on the floor of the blister at 2 days but by 4 days,
micrographs indicated a loss of laminin-5 on the blister floor in front
of the leading edge of migrating epithelial cells. Thus, skin blister
models support the current results on the cornea regarding the
disassembly of the laminin-5 component of the basement membrane at
longer times after injury.
Proteolysis of the BMZ Likely
Polymorphonuclear neutrophils have been demonstrated to bind to
the surface of the exposed basement membrane after débridement
wounding2
35
and would therefore be available to release
proteases capable of degrading the basement membrane. The tear film may
also play a role, in that it is known to contain proteases, especially
after corneal wounding.36
37
Although studies show that
protease activity is lower in corneal epithelial cells after manual
débridement wounds than after wounds penetrating the BMZ, corneal
epithelial cells can produce gelatinase B and
matrilysin,38
39
metalloproteinases capable of degrading
components of the basement membrane. Further, both these
metalloproteinases are present at the leading edge of migration, where
we demonstrated a loss of localization of laminin-5. Studies on
cultured epithelial cells recently showed that proteolytic cleavage of
laminin-5 alters
6ß4 adhesion and migration.40
41
Protease digestion of the basement membrane over time after injury
would alter both its structure and function.
Although proteases may be involved in mediating the loss of basement
membrane proteins, given their availability from multiple sources, we
cannot rule out simple mechanical unraveling of the lamina densa over
time after débridement. Given sufficient time after injury and
the absence of integrins and other molecules to permit their
stabilization and organization, the basement membrane proteins within
the densa may diffuse into the tear film as a result of mechanical
friction caused by the blinking eyelid.
Potential Clinical Relevance
Corneal abrasions affect more than 2 million people in the United
States annually.29
Most are successfully treated and do
not recur, but in a small percentage, recurrent epithelial erosion
(REE) develops, a painful condition characterized by repeated episodes
of epithelial cell loss, usually near the site of initial trauma. REE
has also been observed in patients with some classes of the syndrome
epidermolysis bullosa.42
43
44
45
Treatment for REE begins with
débridement of the corneal epithelium and patching of the eye.
When the condition persists, patients may be treated with either
anterior stromal puncture46
or a modification of excimer
laser photorefractive keratectomy.47
Both approaches
involve manual débridement of the involved epithelium and demand
that new basement membrane be synthesized to be effective. Although the
causes of REE in patients not known to have a blistering disease remain
unclear, studies looking at the structure of the BMZ of corneas from
patients with REE document diffuse and poorly assembled basement
membranes as a common feature in all patients.48
49
In
addition, other conditions including bullous keratopathy50
and diabetes32
are also associated with defective basement
membrane assembly and corneal erosions.
In this study, we showed that there was a loss of several of the
molecules present within the basement membrane at the BMZ, as well as a
loss of the ultrastructure of the lamina densa, when epithelial
débridement wounds were large enough that they required times
longer than 24 hours to close. Future studies to uncover the underlying
mechanism of this loss are under way, focusing primarily on the role
that proteases play and their cellular sources. A more complete
understanding of how epithelial cellmatrix interactions stabilize the
corneal epithelium and the basement membrane during
re-epithelialization after injury will improve our ability to treat
those with poor corneal epithelial healing.
 |
Acknowledgements
|
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The authors thank Ann Tisdale, Jan Orenstein, and Robyn Rufner for
help with the TEM, the GWU Center for Biomedical Communications for
help with photography, and Temmy Qiu for technical assistance.
 |
Footnotes
|
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Supported by National Institutes of Health Grant RO1 EY-O8512-9 (MAS).
Submitted for publication May 14, 1999; revised September 9, 1999; accepted October 5, 1999.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
Corresponding author: Mary Ann Stepp, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology and Department of Ophthalmology, The George Washington University Medical Center, 2300 I Street, NW, Washington, DC 20037. mastepp{at}gwu.edu
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