Abstract
Corneal cross-linking using riboflavin and ultraviolet-A (RFUVA) is a clinical treatment targeting the stroma in progressive keratoconus. The stroma contains keratocan, lumican, mimecan, and decorin, core proteins of major proteoglycans (PGs) that bind collagen fibrils, playing important roles in stromal transparency. Here, a model reaction system using purified, non-glycosylated PG core proteins in solution in vitro has been compared with reactions inside an intact cornea, ex vivo, revealing effects of RFUVA on interactions between PGs and collagen cross-linking. Irradiation with UVA and riboflavin cross-links collagen α and β chains into larger polymers. In addition, RFUVA cross-links PG core proteins, forming higher molecular weight polymers. When collagen type I is mixed with individual purified, non-glycosylated PG core proteins in solution in vitro and subjected to RFUVA, both keratocan and lumican strongly inhibit collagen cross-linking. However, mimecan and decorin do not inhibit but instead form cross-links with collagen, forming new high molecular weight polymers. In contrast, corneal glycosaminoglycans, keratan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate, in isolation from their core proteins, are not cross-linked by RFUVA and do not form cross-links with collagen. Significantly, when RFUVA is conducted on intact corneas ex vivo, both keratocan and lumican, in their natively glycosylated form, do form cross-links with collagen. Thus, RFUVA causes cross-linking of collagen molecules among themselves and PG core proteins among themselves, together with limited linkages between collagen and keratocan, lumican, mimecan, and decorin. RFUVA as a diagnostic tool reveals that keratocan and lumican core proteins interact with collagen very differently than do mimecan and decorin.
Highlights
It is very highly innervated, it does not contain any blood vessels [2,3,4]
For collagen types III and IV, similar results were observed, as shown for the riboflavin and ultraviolet-A (RFUVA) treatment in Fig. 1, lane 5 (Type III) and lane 7 (Type IV). These results suggest that collagen cross-linking definitely happens when irradiating with UVA in the presence of riboflavin
Corneal cross-linking by RFUVA represents a new method for treatment of progressive keratoconus in Europe [40] and
Summary
It is very highly innervated, it does not contain any blood vessels [2,3,4]. In response to RFUVA, normal corneal PG core proteins, keratocan, lumican, mimecan, and decorin (but nonglycosylated (i.e. lacking their normal GAG chains)), appear to undergo cross-linking reactions with themselves that cause their virtual disappearance as monomer molecules (Fig. 2).
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