Calreticulin accelerates corneal wound closure and mitigates fibrosis: Potential therapeutic applications

Author:

Mishra Sarita1,Manzanares Miguel A.1,Prater Justin2,Culp David2,Gold Leslie I.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Division of Precision Medicine New York University School of Medicine Langone Health New York New York USA

2. Powered Research, Research Triangle Park North Carolina New York USA

3. Department of Pathology New York University School of Medicine Langone Health New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractThe processes involved in regeneration of cutaneous compared to corneal tissues involve different intrinsic mechanisms. Importantly, cutaneous wounds involve healing by angiogenesis but vascularization of the cornea obscures vision. Previous studies showed that topically applied calreticulin (CALR) healed full‐thickness excisional animal wounds by a tissue regenerative process markedly enhancing repair without evoking angiogenesis. In the current study, the application of CALR in a rabbit corneal injury model: (1) accelerated full wound closure by 3 days (2) accelerated delayed healing caused by corticosteroids, routinely used to prevent post‐injury inflammation, by 6 days and (3) healed wounds without vascularization or fibrosis/hazing. In vitro, CALR stimulated proliferation of human corneal epithelial cells (CE) and corneal stromal cells (keratocytes) by 1.5‐fold and 1.4‐fold, respectively and induced migration of CE cells and keratocytes, by 72% and 85% compared to controls of 44% and 59%, respectively. As a marker of decreased fibrosis, CALR treated corneal wounds showed decreased immunostaining for α‐smooth muscle actin (α‐SMA) by keratocytes and following CALR treatment in vitro, decreased the levels of TGF‐β2 in human CE cells and α‐SMA in keratocytes. CALR has the potential to be a novel therapeutic both, to accelerate corneal healing from various injuries and in conjunction with corticosteroids.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Medicine

Reference56 articles.

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