Conjunctival epithelial cells do not transdifferentiate in organotypic cultures: expression of K12 keratin is restricted to corneal epithelium
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Current Eye Research
- Vol. 13 (10) , 765-778
- https://doi.org/10.3109/02713689409047012
Abstract
The conjunctival epithelium is intrinsically different from the corneal epithelium in vivo, but sometimes can transform into an epithelium morphologically indistinguishable from the latter after healing of a total corneal epithelial defect. It remains unclear whether this morphologic transformation represents a process of extrinsic modultation or transdifferentiation of intrinsically divergent epithelium. In air-lifted organotypic cultures, rabbit conjunctival epithelial cells lost goblet cell differentiation and were stratified to the same extent as corneal epithelial cells, resembling the above in vivo morphologic transformation. Paired expression of K3 (64 kD) and K12 (55 kD) keratins has been regarded as a marker for corneal-type differentiation. Immunoblot analysis by monoclonal antibody AE5 revealed that K3 keratin was expressed by both submerged or air-lifted corneal and conjunctival cultures with or without 3T3 fibroblasts in collagen gel. In contrast, K12 keratin was expressed only by air-lifted corneal cultures with 3T3 fibroblasts using monoclonal antibody AK2 and two epitope-specific antibodies to N- and C-terminal oligopeptides deduced from the mouse K12 gene. This finding was also confirmed by Northern hybridization with a rabbit K12 cDNA probe. The expression of K12 keratin was more delayed than that of K3 keratin in air-lifted corneal cultures. This dissociated expression of these two keratins resembles that noted in vivo in the stem cell-containing limbal region. These results suggest that morphologic transformation of the conjunctival epithelium represents extrinsic environment modulation, and that differential expression of K12 but not K3 keratin signifies corneal epithelial differentiation. Curr. Eye Res. 13: 765–778, 1994.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Appearance of the keratin pair K3/K12 during embryonic and adult corneal epithelial differentiation in the chick and in the rabbitCell Differentiation and Development, 1990
- Cellular and molecular background of Wolffian lens regenerationCell Differentiation and Development, 1988
- Induction of Conjunctival Transdifferentiation on Vascularized Corneas by Photothrombotic Occlusion of Corneal NeovascularizationOphthalmology, 1988
- Differentiation-related expression of a major 64K corneal keratin in vivo and in culture suggests limbal location of corneal epithelial stem cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1986
- Biochemical transformation of bulbar conjunctiva into corneal epithelium: An electrophoretic analysisExperimental Eye Research, 1985
- Epithelial-mesenchymal interactions in prostatic development. I. morphological observations of prostatic induction by urogenital sinus mesenchyme in epithelium of the adult rodent urinary bladder.The Journal of cell biology, 1983
- Epithelial-mesenchymal interactions in prostatic development. II. Biochemical observations of prostatic induction by urogenital sinus mesenchyme in epithelium of the adult rodent urinary bladder.The Journal of cell biology, 1983
- Direct evidence for transformation of differentiated iris epithelial cells into lens cellsDevelopmental Biology, 1974
- Differentiation of Lens Tissue from the Progeny of Chick Retinal Pigment Cells Cultured In Vitro : A Demonstration of a Switch of Cell Types in Clonal Cell CultureProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1973
- Growth pressure and metaplasia of conjunctival and corneal epitheliumDocumenta Ophthalmologica, 1951