Title: The coating of bovine and rabbit corneas denuded of their endothelium with bovine corneal endothelial cells
Abstract: A method for coating corneas denuded of their endothelium has been developed. The attachment and spreading of cultured bovine corneal endothelial cells seeded upon the Descemet's membrane of corneal buttons previously denuded of their endothelium by delicately sweeping the endothelial side with a cotton swab have been analyzed. Confluent cultures of bovine corneal endothelial cells were exposed to trypsin to disrupt the cell monolayer into single cells. Increasing concentrations of endothelial cells ranging from 2·5 × 104 to 3 × 105 cells were then seeded on the denuded Descemet's membrane of 11 mm bovine corneal buttons. When the corneal buttons were stained with alizarin red after an incubation period of 8 hr at 37°C, the best coating was observed with 105 seeded cells. In this case, no areas of denudation could be seen and the cells were clearly apposed to one another, thereby reconstituting an endothelial cell monolayer. The cultured bovine corneal endothelial cells seeded on denuded Descemet's membranes plated extremely rapidly. By 15 min, 80% of Descemet's membrane was covered with a monolayer of endothelial cells and by 30 min all of Descemet's membrane was covered. The plating of bovine corneal endothelial cells on denuded Descemet's membrane was a direct function of the trypsin concentration to which they were first exposed. Cells first treated with 0·05% trypsin plated poorly 1 hr after being seeded on a denuded Descemet's membrane. Better plating efficiency was achieved with cells first exposed respectively to 0·025% and 0·01% trypsin. The best results were consistently obtained with cells first dissociated with 0·005% trypsin. Although serum is required in vitro for the attachment of normal cells to tissue culture dishes, it was not required for the attachment of corneal endothelial cells to the denuded Descemet's membrane. Cultured corneal endothelial cells plated equally well in the presence or absence of serum. Similar results were obtained when the cells were suspended in aqueous humor instead of in tissue culture medium. When denuded rabbit corneas were used as a substrate instead of bovine corneas, all the parameters studied for the attachment and spreading of bovine corneal endothelial cells seeded on bovine corneas (cell density, time, and medium) lead to similar conclusions with respect to the interactions between corneal endothelial cells and rabbit Descemet's membrane.
Publication Year: 1979
Publication Date: 1979-03-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref', 'pubmed']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 64
AI Researcher Chatbot
Get quick answers to your questions about the article from our AI researcher chatbot