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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Single-cell landscape reveals the epithelial cell-centric pro-inflammatory immune microenvironment in dry eye development.

Journal:
Mucosal immunology
Year:
2024
Authors:
Liu, Zihao et al.
Affiliation:
Eye Hospital · China
Species:
rodent

Abstract

Dry eye disease (DED) is a prevalent chronic eye disease characterized by an aberrant inflammatory response in ocular surface mucosa. The immunological alterations underlying DED remain largely unknown. In this study, we employed single-cell transcriptome sequencing of conjunctival tissue from environment-induced DED mice to investigate multicellular ecosystem and functional changes at different DED stages. Our results revealed an epithelial subtype with fibroblastic characteristics and pro-inflammatory effects emerging in the acute phase of DED. We also found that T helper (Th)1, Th17, and regulatory T cells (Treg) were the dominant clusters of differentiation (CD)4T-cell types involved in regulating immune responses and identified three distinct macrophage subtypes, with the CD72CD11csubtype enhancing chronic inflammation. Furthermore, bulk transcriptome analysis of video display terminal-induced DED consistently suggested the presence of the pro-inflammatory epithelial subtype in human conjunctiva. Our findings have uncovered a DED-associated pro-inflammatory microenvironment in the conjunctiva, centered around epithelial cells, involving interactions with macrophages and CD4T cells, which deepens our understanding of ocular surface mucosal immune responses during DED progression.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38007004/