Optical microsensing reveals spatiotemporal oxygen dynamics in cornea wounds that affect healing via reactive oxygen species

Author:

Ma Li12ORCID,Ferreira Fernando13ORCID,Reid Brian14ORCID,Guo Liang1ORCID,Zhao Min4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dermatology, Institute for Regenerative Cures, School of Medicine University of California Davis California USA

2. Skin and Cosmetic Research Department Shanghai Skin Disease Hospital Shanghai China

3. Departamento de Biologia, Centro de Biologia Molecular e Ambiental (CBMA) Universidade do Minho Braga Portugal

4. Department of Ophthalmology & Vision Science Institute for Regenerative Cures, School of Medicine, University of California Davis California USA

Abstract

AbstractOxygen (O2) metabolism plays a critical role in cornea wound healing, regeneration, and homeostasis; however, the underlying spatiotemporal mechanisms are poorly understood. Here we used an optical sensor to profile O2 flux in intact and wounded corneas of mouse eyes. Intact corneas have unique centrifugal O2 influx profiles, smallest flux at the cornea center, and highest at the limbus. Following cornea injury, the O2 influx profile presents three distinct consecutive phases: a “decreasing” phase from 0 to 6 h, a “recovering” phase from 12 to 48 h, and a ‘peak’ phase from 48 to 72 h, congruent to previously described healing phases. Immediately after wounding, the O2 influx drops at wound center and wound edge but does not change significantly at the wound side or limbus. Inhibition of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the decreasing phase significantly reduces O2 influx, decreases epithelial migration and consequently delays healing. The dynamics of O2 influx show a positive correlation with cell proliferation at the wound side, with significantly increased proliferation at the peak phase of O2 influx. This study elucidates the spatiotemporal O2 dynamics in both intact and wounded rodent cornea and shows the crucial role of O2 dynamics in regulating cell migration and proliferation through ROS metabolism, ultimately contributing to wound healing. These results demonstrate the usefulness of the micro‐optrode in the characterization of spatiotemporal O2 dynamics. Injury‐induced changes in O2 metabolism and ROS production modulate O2 dynamics at wound and control cell migration and proliferation, both essential for proper wound healing.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Womack Army Medical Center

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

Research to Prevent Blindness

Publisher

Wiley

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