Abstract
This study investigated changes in collagen fibril architecture and the sulphation status of keratan sulphate (KS) glycosaminoglycan (GAG) epitopes from central to peripheral corneal regions. Freshly excised adult bovine corneal tissue was examined as a function of radial position from the centre of the cornea outwards. Corneal thickness, tissue hydration, hydroxyproline content, and the total amount of sulphated GAG were all measured. High and low-sulphated epitopes of keratan sulphate were studied by immunohistochemistry and quantified by ELISA. Chondroitin sulphate (CS) and dermatan sulphate (DS) distributions were observed by immunohistochemistry following specific enzyme digestions. Electron microscopy and X-ray fibre diffraction were used to ascertain collagen fibril architecture. The bovine cornea was 1021±5.42μm thick at its outer periphery, defined as 9–12mm from the corneal centre, compared to 844±8.10μm at the centre. The outer periphery of the cornea was marginally, but not significantly, more hydrated than the centre (H=4.3 vs. H=3.7), and was more abundant in hydroxyproline (0.12 vs. 0.06mg/mg dry weight of cornea). DMMB assays indicated no change in the total amount of sulphated GAG across the cornea. Immunohistochemistry revealed the presence of both high- and low-sulphated epitopes of KS, as well as DS, throughout the cornea, and CS only in the peripheral cornea before the limbus. Quantification by ELISA, disclosed that although both high- and low-sulphated KS remained constant throughout stromal depth at different radial positions, high-sulphated epitopes remained constant from the corneal centre to outer-periphery, whereas low-sulphated epitopes increased significantly. Both small angle X-ray diffraction and TEM analysis revealed that collagen fibril diameter remained relatively constant until the outer periphery was reached, after which fibrils became more widely spaced (from small angle x-ray diffraction analysis) and of larger diameter as they approached the sclera. Depth-profiled synchrotron microbeam analyses showed that, at different radial positions from the corneal centre outwards, fibril diameter was greater superficially than in deeper stromal regions. The interfibrillar spacing was also higher at mid-depth in the stroma than it was in anterior and posterior stromal regions. Collagen fibrils in the bovine cornea exhibited a fairly consistent spacing and diameter from the corneal centre to the 12mm radial position, after which a significant increase was seen. While the constancy of the overall sulphation levels of proteoglycans in the cornea may correlate with the fibrillar architecture, there was no correlation between the latter and the distribution of low-sulphated KS.
Highlights
We investigated collagen fibril parameters and sulphation patterns of keratan sulphate (KS) GAG across the cornea from the centre to the periphery, to test whether different stromal KS GAG patterns are associated with altered fibril structure and organization
The dimethylmethylene blue (DMMB) analysis revealed no significant alteration in the amount of total sulphated GAG across the cornea from its centre to edge, which may indicate that the sulphation of the GAG population as a whole, i.e. KS and chondroitin sulphate/dermatan sulphate (CS/DS), remains constant (Fig. 2D)
The corneal extracellular matrix is thought to be governed, in part, by interactions between collagen fibrils and PG molecules modified with sulphated GAG side chains
Summary
The ordered structure of the corneal stroma is essential for transparency and it is subject to relatively strict positional regulation of its components, in contrast to fibrous tendon or the opaque sclera, which contain fewer PGs (Scott, 1995). These specific properties of the cornea make it a useful model for relating the subtle intricacies of the tissue to its specific functions and studying the various structural roles of sulphated proteoglycans found in connective tissues generally.
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