1. Dynasore protects the ocular surface against damaging oxidative stress.
- Author
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Webster A, Chintala SK, Kim J, Ngan M, Itakura T, Panjwani N, Argüeso P, Barr JT, Jeong S, and Fini ME
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Disease Models, Animal, Endocytosis drug effects, Epithelial Cells drug effects, Eye drug effects, Fluorescein adverse effects, Humans, Mice, Organ Culture Techniques, Rose Bengal adverse effects, Epithelial Cells cytology, Eye cytology, Fluorescent Dyes adverse effects, Hydrazones pharmacology, Oxidative Stress drug effects, Protective Agents pharmacology
- Abstract
Water soluble "vital" dyes are commonly used clinically to evaluate health of the ocular surface; however, staining mechanisms remain poorly understood. Recent evidence suggests that sublethal damage stimulates vital dye uptake by individual living cells. Since cell damage can also stimulate reparative plasma membrane remodeling, we hypothesized that dye uptake occurs via endocytic vesicles. In support of this idea, we show here that application of oxidative stress to relatively undifferentiated monolayer cultures of human corneal epithelial cells stimulates both dye uptake and endocytosis, and that dye uptake is blocked by co-treatment with three different endocytosis inhibitors. Stress application to stratified and differentiated corneal epithelial cell cultures, which are a better model of the ocular surface, also stimulated dye uptake; however, endocytosis was not stimulated, and two of the endocytosis inhibitors did not block dye uptake. The exception was Dynasore and its more potent analogue Dyngo-4a, both small molecules developed to target dynamin family GTPases, but also having off-target effects on the plasma membrane. Significantly, while Dynasore blocked stress-stimulated dye uptake at the ocular surface of ex vivo mouse eyes when treatment was performed at the same time as eyes were stressed, it had no effect when used after stress was applied and the ocular surface was already damaged. Thus, Dynasore could not be working by inhibiting endocytosis. Employing cytotoxicity and western blotting assays, we went on to demonstrate an alternative mechanism. We show that Dynasore is remarkably protective of cells and their surface glycocalyx, preventing damage due to stress, and thus precluding dye entry. These unexpected and novel findings provide greater insight into the mechanisms of vital dye uptake and point the direction for future study. Significantly, they also suggest that Dynasore and its analogues might be used therapeutically to protect the ocular surface and to treat ocular surface disease., Competing Interests: AW, SJ and MEF are named as inventors on a patent application related to this work, submitted by the University of Southern California entitled “Method to Protect and Seal the Ocular Surface” (United States application 16/103,741, filed Aug 14, 2018). The other authors have no commercial or proprietary interest in any concept or product described in this article.
- Published
- 2018
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