Purpose: Contact lens wear carries a risk of complications, including corneal infection. Solving these complications has been hindered by limitations of existing animal models. Here, we report development of a new murine model of contact lens wear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDry eye disease can cause ocular surface inflammation that disrupts the corneal epithelial barrier. While dry eye patients are known to have an increased risk of corneal infection, it is not known whether there is a direct causal relationship between these two conditions. Here, we tested the hypothesis that experimentally-induced dry eye (EDE) increases susceptibility to corneal infection using a mouse model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpithelial cells express antimicrobial proteins in response to invading pathogens, although little is known regarding epithelial defense mechanisms during healthy conditions. Here we report that epithelial cytokeratins have innate defense properties because they constitutively produce cytoprotective antimicrobial peptides. Glycine-rich C-terminal fragments derived from human cytokeratin 6A were identified in bactericidal lysate fractions of human corneal epithelial cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMucosal epithelial cells, including those at the ocular surface, resist infection by most microbes in vivo but can be susceptible to microbial virulence in vitro. While fluids bathing mucosal surfaces (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile a plethora of in vivo models exist for studying infectious disease and its resolution, few enable factors involved in the maintenance of health to be studied in situ. This is due in part to a paucity of tools for studying subtleties of bacterial-host interactions at a cellular level within live organs or tissues, requiring investigators to rely on overt outcomes (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe previously showed that ADP-ribosylation (ADP-r) activity of ExoS, a type III secreted toxin of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, enables bacterial replication in corneal and respiratory epithelial cells and correlates with bacterial trafficking to plasma membrane blebs (bleb-niche formation). Here, we explored another type III secreted toxin, ExoY, for its impact on intracellular trafficking and survival, and for virulence in vivo using a murine corneal infection model. Chromosomal or plasmid-mediated expression of exoY in invasive P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
March 2011
Purpose: Mechanisms determining epithelial resistance versus susceptibility to microbial traversal in vivo remain poorly understood. Here, a novel murine model was used to explore factors influencing the corneal epithelial barrier to Pseudomonas aeruginosa penetration.
Methods: Murine corneas were blotted with tissue paper before inoculation with green fluorescent protein-expressing P.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
June 2010
Purpose: Contact lens wear predisposes to Pseudomonas aeruginosa keratitis, but the mechanisms involved remain unclear. An in vivo model was used to study lens inoculation conditions enabling disease.
Methods: Custom-made hydrogel contact lenses were fitted to rats after incubation in P.
Our previous studies showed that surfactant protein D (SP-D) is present in human tear fluid and that it can protect corneal epithelial cells against bacterial invasion. Here we developed a novel null-infection model to test the hypothesis that SP-D contributes to the clearance of viable Pseudomonas aeruginosa from the healthy ocular surface in vivo. Healthy corneas of Black Swiss mice were inoculated with 10(7) or 10(9) CFU of invasive (PAO1) or cytotoxic (6206) P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
December 2008
Alternative patterns of neural activity drive different rhythmic locomotory patterns in both invertebrates and mammals. The neuro-molecular mechanisms responsible for the expression of rhythmic behavioral patterns are poorly understood. Here we show that Caenorhabditis elegans switches between distinct forms of locomotion, or crawling versus swimming, when transitioning between solid and liquid environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
February 2009
Purpose: This study was designed to determine whether the ability to adversely affect corneal epithelial cell health is a factor common to Pseudomonas aeruginosa keratitis strains and to assess the prevalence of each pathogenic phenotype and genotype in a canine model of naturally-acquired P. aeruginosa ocular infection.
Methods: P.