Department of Molecular Medicine, College of Medicine, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL 33612-4799, USA.
Exp Eye Res. 2010 Sep;91(3):326-35. doi: 10.1016/j.exer.2010.06.021. Epub 2010 Jul 3.
The cornea consists primarily of three layers: an outer layer containing an epithelium, a middle stromal layer consisting of a collagen-rich extracellular matrix (ECM) interspersed with keratocytes and an inner layer of endothelial cells. The stroma consists of dense, regularly packed collagen fibrils arranged as orthogonal layers or lamellae. The corneal stroma is unique in having a homogeneous distribution of small diameter 25-30 nm fibrils that are regularly packed within lamellae and this arrangement minimizes light scattering permitting transparency. The ECM of the corneal stroma consists primarily of collagen type I with lesser amounts of collagen type V and four proteoglycans: three with keratan sulfate chains; lumican, keratocan, osteoglycin and one with a chondroitin sulfate chain; decorin. It is the core proteins of these proteoglycans and collagen type V that regulate the growth of collagen fibrils. The overall size of the proteoglycans are small enough to fit in the spaces between the collagen fibrils and regulate their spacing. The stroma is formed during development by neural crest cells that migrate into the space between the corneal epithelium and corneal endothelium and become keratoblasts. The keratoblasts proliferate and synthesize high levels of hyaluronan to form an embryonic corneal stroma ECM. The keratoblasts differentiate into keratocytes which synthesize high levels of collagens and keratan sulfate proteoglycans that replace the hyaluronan/water-rich ECM with the densely packed collagen fibril-type ECM seen in transparent adult corneas. When an incisional wound through the epithelium into stroma occurs the keratocytes become hypercellular myofibroblasts. These can later become wound fibroblasts, which provides continued transparency or become myofibroblasts that produce a disorganized ECM resulting in corneal opacity. The growth factors IGF-I/II are likely responsible for the formation of the well organized ECM associated with transparency produced by keratocytes during development and by the wound fibroblast during repair. In contrast, TGF-beta would cause the formation of the myofibroblast that produces corneal scaring. Thus, the growth factor mediated synthesis of several different collagen types and the core proteins of several different leucine-rich type proteoglycans as well as posttranslational modifications of the collagens and the proteoglycans are required to produce collagen fibrils with the size and spacing needed for corneal stromal transparency.
外层包含上皮细胞,中层基质由富含胶原蛋白的细胞外基质 (ECM) 组成,其中散布着角膜基质细胞,内层为内皮细胞。基质由排列成正交层或薄片的密集、规则排列的胶原纤维组成。角膜基质的独特之处在于具有均匀分布的小直径 25-30nm 纤维,这些纤维规则地排列在薄片中,这种排列方式最大限度地减少了光散射,从而保证了透明度。角膜基质的 ECM 主要由 I 型胶原蛋白组成,还有较少量的 V 型胶原蛋白和四种蛋白聚糖:三种带有硫酸角质素链; 亮蛋白、角膜蛋白、骨桥蛋白和一种带有软骨素硫酸链; 饰胶蛋白。正是这些蛋白聚糖和 V 型胶原蛋白的核心蛋白调节着胶原纤维的生长。这些蛋白聚糖的总体尺寸足够小,可以容纳在胶原纤维之间的空间内,并调节它们的间距。基质在发育过程中由神经嵴细胞形成,这些细胞迁移到角膜上皮和角膜内皮之间的空间内,并变成角膜基质细胞。角膜基质细胞增殖并合成高水平的透明质酸,形成胚胎期角膜基质 ECM。角膜基质细胞分化为角膜基质细胞,合成高水平的胶原蛋白和硫酸角质素蛋白聚糖,用密集排列的胶原纤维型 ECM 取代富含透明质酸/水的 ECM,形成透明的成人角膜。当通过上皮到基质的切口性创伤发生时,角膜基质细胞变成富含细胞的肌成纤维细胞。这些细胞后来可以变成伤口成纤维细胞,从而保持透明度,或者变成产生无序 ECM 的肌成纤维细胞,导致角膜混浊。IGF-I/II 生长因子可能负责形成与发育过程中角膜基质细胞产生的透明度以及修复过程中的伤口成纤维细胞产生的透明度相关的组织良好的 ECM。相比之下,TGF-β 会导致产生产生角膜瘢痕的肌成纤维细胞。因此,生长因子介导的几种不同胶原蛋白类型和几种富含亮氨酸的蛋白聚糖的核心蛋白的合成以及胶原蛋白和蛋白聚糖的翻译后修饰是产生具有大小和间距的胶原纤维所必需的,以实现角膜基质的透明度。