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Human Corneal Tissue Model for Nociceptive Assessments
Author(s) -
Siran Wang,
Ghezzi Chiara E.,
Cairns Dana M.,
Pollard Rachel E.,
Chen Ying,
Gomes Rachel,
McKay Tina B.,
Pouli Dimitra,
Jamali Arsia,
Georgakoudi Irene,
Funderburgh James L.,
Kenyon Kenneth,
Hamrah Pedram,
Kaplan David L.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
advanced healthcare materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.288
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 2192-2659
pISSN - 2192-2640
DOI - 10.1002/adhm.201800488
Subject(s) - nociception , capsaicin , cornea , in vivo , medicine , stimulation , neuroscience , pharmacology , ophthalmology , biology , receptor , microbiology and biotechnology
New in vitro tissue models to mimic in vivo conditions are needed to provide insight into mechanisms involved in peripheral pain responses, potential therapeutic strategies to address these responses, and to replace animal models for such indications. For example, the rabbit cornea Draize test has become the standard method used for decades to screen ophthalmic drug and consumer product toxicity. In vitro tissue models with functional innervation have the potential to replace in vivo animal testing and provide sophisticated bench tools to study ocular nociception and its amelioration. Herein, full thickness, innervated, 3D human corneal tissues are grown under physiologically relevant culture conditions to study nociceptive‐related responses, by mimicking ocular environmental cues, including intraocular pressure (IOP) and tear flow (TF). Capsaicin, a chili pepper‐derived irritant known to cause a burning sensation in mammalian tissues is utilized as a nociceptive stimulant to induce pain, while subsequent serum treatment is used to mimic healing. Pain mediators released upon capsaicin stimulation and cell regrowth after serum treatment are characterized to assess ocular responses in this new, innervated, human corneal tissue system for comparison of outcomes to established animal and related responses.