4.8 Article

A Mucin-Deficient Ocular Surface Mimetic Platform for Interrogating Drug Effects on Biolubrication, Antiadhesion Properties, and Barrier Functionality

期刊

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
卷 14, 期 16, 页码 18016-18030

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c22280

关键词

lubricin; adhesion; ocular surface; dry eye disease; mucin deficiency

资金

  1. Novartis (Basel, Switzerland)
  2. National Institutes of Health (National Eye Institute) [K08EY028176, P30-EY026877]
  3. Research to Prevent Blindness (RPB)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Dry eye disease affects over 100 million people worldwide and imposes a significant burden on healthcare systems. Researchers have developed a biomimetic platform to study mucin-deficient dry eye disease and evaluated the effectiveness of recombinant human lubricin as a potential treatment. The results indicate that recombinant human lubricin can reverse the damage caused by mucin loss and improve the symptoms of dry eye disease.
Dry eye disease (DED) affects more than 100 million people worldwide, causing significant patient discomfort and imposing a multi-billion-dollar burden on global health care systems. In DED patients, the natural biolubrication process that facilitates pain-free blinking goes awry due to an imbalance of lipids, aqueous medium, and mucins in the tear film, resulting in ocular surface damage. Identifying strategies to reduce adhesion and shear stresses between the ocular surface and the conjunctival cells lining the inside of the eyelid during blink cycles is a promising approach to improve the signs and symptoms of DED. However, current preclinical models for screening ocular lubricants rely on scarce, heterogeneous tissue samples or model substrates that do not capture the complex biochemical and biophysical cues present at the ocular surface. To recapitulate the hierarchical architecture and phenotype of the ocular interface for preclinical drug screening, we developed an in vitro mucin-deficient DED model platform that mimics the complexity of the ocular interface and investigated its utility in biolubrication, antiadhesion, and barrier protection studies using recombinant human lubricin, a promising investigational therapy for DED. The biomimetic platform recapitulated the pathological changes in biolubrication, adhesion, and barrier functionality often observed in mucin-deficient DED patients and demonstrated that recombinant human lubricin can reverse the damage induced by mucin loss in a dose- and conformation-dependent manner. Taken together, these results highlight the potential of the platform-and recombinant human lubricin-in advancing the standard of care for mucin-deficient DED patients.

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