Abstract

Prostaglandin analogs are first line therapy in the treatment of glaucoma, but also display side effects during ocular inflammation. In this context, the potential side effects of prostaglandin analogs on the normally avascular cornea, the main application route for eye drops, are so far not fully defined. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate the vascular effects of the prostaglandin analog tafluprost on the healthy and inflamed cornea. For in vitro studies, blood and lymphatic endothelial cells were treated with tafluprost; cell proliferation was assessed after 48 h. For long-term in vivo studies under healthy conditions, naïve corneas of BALB/c mice were treated with tafluprost eye drops for 4 weeks. For short-term in vivo studies under inflammatory conditions, corneal inflammation was induced by suture placement; mice then received tafluprost eye drops for 1 week. Afterwards, corneas were stained with CD31 as panendothelial and LYVE-1 as lymphendothelial (and macrophage) marker. In vitro, tafluprost did not alter blood or lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation. In vivo, there was no change in limbal blood or lymphatic vessel anatomy after long-term treatment with tafluprost. Short-term treatment with tafluprost under inflammatory conditions did not influence the recruitment of LYVE-1 positive macrophages into the cornea. Moreover, treatment of inflamed corneas with tafluprost did not significantly influence corneal hem- and lymphangiogenesis. Tafluprost does not affect blood and lymphatic vessel growth, neither under resting nor under inflammatory conditions. These findings suggest a safe vascular profile of tafluprost eye drops at the inflammatory neovascularized cornea.

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