Role of lumican in the corneal epithelium during wound healing

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Abstract

Lumican regulates collagenous matrix assembly as a keratan sulfate proteoglycan in the cornea and is also present in the connective tissues of other organs and embryonic corneal stroma as a glycoprotein. In normal unwounded cornea, lumican is expressed by stromal keratocytes. Our data show that injured mouse corneal epithelium ectopically and transiently expresses lumican during the early phase of wound healing, suggesting a potential lumican functionality unrelated to regulation of collagen fibrillogenesis, e.g. modulation of epithelial cell adhesion or migration. An anti-lumican antibody was found to retard corneal epithelial wound healing in cultured mouse eyes. Healing of a corneal epithelial injury in Lum(-/-) mice was significantly delayed compared with Lum(+/-) mice. These observations indicate that lumican expressed in injured epithelium may modulate cell behavior such as adhesion or migration, thus contributing to corneal epithelial wound healing.

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Saika, S., Shiraishi, A., Saika, S., Liu, C. Y., Funderburgh, J. L., Kao, C. W. C., … Kao, W. W. Y. (2000). Role of lumican in the corneal epithelium during wound healing. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 275(4), 2607–2612. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.275.4.2607

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