AI Article Synopsis

  • Disorders of the cornea impact millions, and understanding how to maintain or regenerate it is still a challenge.
  • Research showed that disrupting NF-κB in corneal epithelial stem cells leads to problems with corneal healing and age-related deterioration, causing issues like abnormal healing and new blood vessel growth.
  • The study highlights the importance of the NF-κB-retinoic acid pathway and suggests that targeting this pathway could be a potential treatment for corneal disorders.

Article Abstract

Disorders of the transparent cornea affect millions of people worldwide. However, how to maintain and/or regenerate this organ remains unclear. Here, we show that (encoding a canonical NF-κB subunit) ablation in K14 corneal epithelial stem cells not only disrupts corneal regeneration but also results in age-dependent epithelial deterioration, which triggers aberrant wound-healing processes including stromal remodeling, neovascularization, epithelial metaplasia, and plaque formation at the central cornea. These anomalies are largely recapitulated in normal mice that age naturally. Mechanistically, deletion suppresses expression of Aldh1a1, an enzyme required for retinoic acid synthesis from vitamin A. Retinoic acid administration blocks development of ocular anomalies in mice and naturally aged mice. Moreover, epithelial metaplasia and plaque formation are preventable by inhibition of angiogenesis. This study thus uncovers the major mechanisms governing corneal maintenance, regeneration, and aging and identifies the NF-κB-retinoic acid pathway as a therapeutic target for corneal disorders.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8192125PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.67315DOI Listing

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