Abstract
To determine whether 24-hour exposure to the desiccating stress (DS) dry eye model induces NF-kB and NLRP3 inflammasome pathways in the mouse cornea epithelium. Six- to 8-week-old C57BL/6J mice were housed under normal humidity (nonstressed) or subjected to DS from a drafty, low-humidity environment combined with subcutaneous scopolamine four times/day for one day to suppress tear production (DS1). Cornea whole mounts were prepared for immunofluorescent staining, or the corneal epithelium was scraped for NF-kB p-p65 ELISA, Western blot, or real-time PCR to detect NF-kB and inflammasome pathway proteins and gene transcripts, respectively. NF-kB phospho-p65 protein, nuclear NF-kB p-p65, and expression of the NF-kB inducible cytokines (IL-12a, IL-12b, and lymphotoxin b [Ltb]) and chemokine (CCL-2) genes were significantly increased in DS1 compared to nonstressed control. NLRP3 protein and RNA transcripts significantly increased in DS1. NLRP3 and Caspase-1 immunostaining increased in the cornea epithelium at DS1. At DS1 there was no change in IL-18 and a decrease in IL-1β mRNA transcripts; however, levels of bound and total IL-18 protein increased at DS1, and the level of mature IL-1β increased from DS1 to DS5. These findings indicate innate NF-kB and NLRP3 inflammasome inflammatory pathways are induced in the corneal epithelium within one day in the DS dry eye model. NF-kB activation was associated with increased expression of inflammatory mediators involved in dry eye. Induction of these pathways is accompanied by increased bound/total IL-18 and mature IL-1β.
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