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Anti-inflammatory protein TSG-6 reduces inflammatory damage to the cornea following chemical and mechanical injury
Cited 186 time in
Web of Science
Cited 195 time in Scopus
- Authors
- Issue Date
- 2010-09
- Publisher
- National Academy of Sciences
- Citation
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol.107 No.39, pp.16875-16880
- Abstract
- Previous reports demonstrated that adult stem/progenitor cells from bone marrow (multipotent mesenchymal stem cells; MSCs) can repair injured tissues with little evidence of engraftment or differentiation. In exploring this phenomenon, our group has recently discovered that the therapeutic benefits of MSCs are in part explained by the cells being activated by signals from injured tissues to express an anti-inflammatory protein TNF-α-stimulated gene/protein 6 (TSG-6). Therefore, we elected to test the hypothesis that TSG-6 would have therapeutic effects in inflammatory but non-infectious diseases of the corneal surface. We produced a chemical and mechanical injury of the cornea in rats by brief application of 100% ethanol followed by mechanical debridement of corneal and limbal epithelium. Recombinant human TSG-6 or PBS solution was then injected into the anterior chamber of the eye. TSG-6 markedly decreased corneal opacity, neovascularization, and neutrophil infiltration. The levels of proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines, and matrix metalloproteinases were also decreased. The data indicated that TSG-6, a therapeutic protein produced by MSCs in response to injury signals, can protect the corneal surface from the excessive inflammatory response following injury.
- ISSN
- 0027-8424
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