Abstract
Our goal was to develop a 3-D multi-cellular construct using primary human corneal fibroblasts cultured on a disorganized collagen substrate in a scaffold-free environment and to use it to determine the regulation of proteoglycans over an extended period of time (11 weeks). Electron micrographs revealed multi-layered constructs with cells present in between alternating parallel and perpendicular arrays of fibrils. Type I collagen increased 2-4-fold. Stromal proteoglycans including lumican, syndecan4, decorin, biglycan, mimecan, and perlecan were expressed. The presence of glycosaminoglycan chains was demonstrated for a subset of the core proteins (lumican, biglycan, and decorin) using lyase digestion. Cuprolinic blue-stained cultures showed that sulfated proteoglycans were present throughout the construct and most prominent in its mid-region. The size of the Cuprolinic-positive filaments resembled those previously reported in a human corneal stroma. Under the current culture conditions, the cells mimic a development or nonfibrotic repair phenotype. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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Ren, R., Hutcheon, A. E. K., Guo, X. Q., Saeidi, N., Melotti, S. A., Ruberti, J. W., … Trinkaus-Randall, V. (2008). Human primary corneal fibroblasts synthesize and deposit proteoglycans in long-term 3-D cultures. Developmental Dynamics, 237(10), 2705–2715. https://doi.org/10.1002/dvdy.21606
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