Abstract
The conjunctival mucosa has several similarities to the mucosal immune system of the gut and bronchus. Like the gut and bronchial mucosa, the conjunctiva is capable of inducing tolerance to encountered antigens and possesses a repertoire of CD8+ intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs) bearing the human mucosal lymphocyte-1 antigen (HML-1) which has been shown to be an α(E)β7 integrin. The epithelial cells surface ligand for HML-1 is E-cadherin. The distribution of E-cadherin in the normal human conjunctiva and in cornea is not known. We investigated E-cadherin distribution in the conjunctiva and cornea by immunohistochemistry. E-cadherin was found to be present in all layers of the conjunctival epithelium but not in corneal epithelium. In the conjunctiva it may act as a ligand for the HML-1+ IELs. The specific location of IELs along the basal cells of the conjunctiva compared with the generalised distribution of E-cadherin through all layers, indicates that factors other than E-cadherin binding determine the distribution of HML-1+ IELs. We performed electron microscopy on de-epithelialised conjunctival and corneal samples. We demonstrated the presence of epithelial basement membrane pores in the conjunctiva but not in the cornea. Lymphocyte migration from the substantia propria to the intra-epithelial compartment appears to occur through these pores, which may also serve as a conduit for antigen presentation by epithelial antigen presenting cells (APCs) to lymphocytes in the substantia propria.
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Scott, R. A. H., Lauweryns, B., Snead, D. M. J., Haynes, R. J., Mahida, Y., & Dua, H. S. (1997). E-cadherin distribution and epithelial basement membrane characteristics of the normal human conjunctiva and cornea. Eye, 11(5), 607–612. https://doi.org/10.1038/eye.1997.163
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