1. Alteration of gene expression in mice after glaucoma filtration surgery.
- Author
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Adachi K, Asada Y, Hirakata T, Onoue M, Iwamoto S, Kasuga T, and Matsuda A
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Conjunctiva metabolism, Conjunctiva surgery, Filtering Surgery instrumentation, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mitomycin therapeutic use, Surgical Wound Infection drug therapy, Surgical Wound Infection genetics, Filtering Surgery adverse effects, Glaucoma surgery, Surgical Wound Infection metabolism, Transcriptome
- Abstract
To clarify the early alterations of gene expression using a mouse model of glaucoma filtration surgery, we carried out microarray expression analysis. Using BALB/c mice, a filtration surgery model was made by incision of the limbal conjunctiva, followed by the insertion of a 33G needle tip into the anterior chamber, and 11-0 nylon sutures. Subgroups of mice were treated intraoperatively with 0.4 mg/ml mitomycin-C (MMC). At day 3 after surgery the bleb was maintained. The bleb region tissue was sampled 3 days after the filtration surgery, and gene expression analysis was carried out using a mouse Agilent 8 × 60 K array. We found 755 hyperexpressed transcripts in the bleb region compared to control conjunctiva. The hyperexpressed transcripts included epithelial cell metaplasia-related (Il1b, Krt16, Sprr1b), inflammation-related (Ccl2, Il6) and wound healing-related (Lox, Timp1) genes. We also found downregulation of a goblet cell marker gene (Gp2) in the bleb conjunctiva. MMC treatment suppressed elastin (Eln) gene expression and enhanced keratinization-related gene expression (Krt1, Lor) in the bleb region. Our results suggest the importance of epithelial wound healing after filtration surgery, and this filtration surgery model will be a useful tool for further pathophysiological analysis.
- Published
- 2020
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