Abstract

Background: Corneal inflammatory hem- and lymphangiogenesis significantly increase the risk for immune rejection after subsequent allogeneic corneal transplantation. The purpose of this study was to analyze the impact of temporary selective inhibition of lymphangiogenesis after transplantation on graft survival. Methods: Allogeneic transplantation from C57BL/6 mice to BalbC mice was performed as "high-risk" keratoplasty in a prevascularized corneal host bed (suture-induced inflammatory corneal neovascularization). The treatment group received integrin α5β1-blocking small molecules (JSM6427) at the time of transplantation and for two weeks afterwards. Control mice received a vehicle solution. Grafts were evaluated weekly for graft rejection using an opacity score. At the end of the follow-up, immunohistochemical staining of corneal wholemounts for lymphatic vessels as well as CD11b+ immune cells was performed. Results: Temporary postoperative inhibition of lymphangiogenesis by JSM6427 improved the corneal graft survival significantly. At the end of the follow-up, no significant reduction in CD11b+ immunoreactive cells within the graft compared to controls was found. Conclusions: The significant improvement of corneal graft survival by the selective, temporary postoperative inhibition of lymphangiogenesis after keratoplasty using integrin antagonists shows the impact of lymphatic vessels in the early postoperative phase. Retarding lymphatic vessel ingrowth into the graft might be sufficient for the shift to immunological tolerance in the postoperative period, even after high-risk keratoplasty.

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