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Cell-independent matrix configuration in early corneal development

Authors :
Andrew J. Quantock
Carlo Knupp
Peter Y. Lwigale
Yanhui Ma
James Robert Ralphs
Elena Koudouna
James V. Jester
Robert D. Young
Source :
Experimental Eye Research
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Academic Press, 2019.

Abstract

Mechanisms controlling the spatial configuration of the remarkably ordered collagen-rich extracellular matrix of the transparent cornea remain incompletely understood. We previously described the assembly of the emerging corneal matrix in the mid and late stages of embryogenesis and concluded that collagen fibril organisation was driven by cell-directed mechanisms. Here, the early stages of corneal morphogenesis were examined by serial block face scanning electron microscopy of embryonic chick corneas starting at embryonic day three (E3), followed by a Fourier transform analysis of three-dimensional datasets and theoretical considerations of factors that influence matrix formation. Eyes developing normally and eyes that had the lens surgically removed at E3 were studied. Uniformly thin collagen fibrils are deposited by surface ectoderm-derived corneal epithelium in the primary stroma of the developing chick cornea and form an acellular matrix with a striking micro-lamellar orthogonal arrangement. Fourier transform analysis supported this observation and indicated that adjacent micro-lamellae display a clockwise rotation of fibril orientation, depth-wise below the epithelium. We present a model which attempts to explain how, in the absence of cells in the primary stroma, collagen organisation might be influenced by cell-independent, intrinsic mechanisms, such as fibril axial charge derived from associated proteoglycans. On a supra-lamellar scale, fine cords of non-collagenous filamentous matrix were detected over large tissue volumes. These extend into the developing cornea from the epithelial basal lamina and appear to associate with the neural crest cells that migrate inwardly to form, first the corneal endothelium and then keratocytes which synthesise the mature, secondary corneal stroma. In a small number of experimental specimens, matrix cords were present even when periocular neural crest cell migration and corneal morphogenesis had been perturbed following removal of the lens at E3.<br />Graphical abstract Image 1<br />Highlights • Highly-ordered connective tissue appears early in development of the avian cornea. • Cell-independent mechanisms may contribute to the organisation of collagen fibrils into an orthogonal array. • Matrix cords from epithelium into stroma contact invading neural crest cells.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10960007 and 00144835
Volume :
187
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Experimental Eye Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e4903c9a1b8cb9d47b479e500fe7aca