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https://doi.org/10.1167/iovs.08-1721
Copy DOIPublication Date: Aug 8, 2008 | |
Citations: 99 |
Lymphatic vessel endothelial hyaluronic acid receptor (LYVE-1) is a newly discovered lymphatic endothelium-specific marker that is also expressed by a subpopulation of macrophages. To date, there is no report on its expression in the posterior human uvea. The purpose of this study was to investigate the expression of LYVE-1 in normal human choroids. Eyes of body/cornea donors (55-89 years of age; 4-9 hours postmortem) were obtained. Choroids were dissected and prepared for cryosections followed by immunohistochemistry with anti-human LYVE-1 antiserum and immunogold labeling. In addition, anti-human antibodies against macrophage markers (CD68, MHC class II) and lymphatic (podoplanin) and blood vascular endothelium (CD31, vWF) were used. For documentation, light-, fluorescence-, confocal laser scanning-, and electron-microscopy were used. The normal human choroidal stroma contained 274 +/- 86 LYVE-1 positive cells/mm(2). The cells displayed irregular shapes with a relatively uniform diameter of 32 mum. Costaining with CD68 and negativity for CD31, podoplanin, and melan-A/HMB45, as well as electron microscopic features, suggest these LYVE-1(+) cells to be macrophages. Besides that, no classic LYVE-1(+)/podoplanin(+) lymphatic vessels were detected within the normal adult human choroid. The normal adult human choroid does not contain typical lymph vessels, but is endowed with a significant number of LYVE-1 positive macrophages. These cells may be involved in choroidal hyaluronic acid metabolism or contribute to temporary formation of lymphatic channels under inflammatory conditions.
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