Project Details
Description
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The movement and morphological changes of
single cells in the corneal stroma of the living mouse will be observed under a
fluorescence microscope. The behavior of normal cells as well as those in the
neighborhood of a mild, circumscribed, injury will be followed. The injury will
consist of a small circular epithelial debridement or the introduction of
hydrogen ions by iontophoresis over a 0.4 mm circle, both of which are
reproducible. The keratocytes and other stromal cells will be followed by the
use of transgenic mice engineered to express fluorescent proteins ubiquitously,
or by staining with nuclear or cytoplasmic fluorescent dyes. Leucocytes will be
labeled with nuclear dye systemically. The images are recorded by a digital
camera and time-lapse sequences are constructed for analysis. The mechanisms of
cell death, activation and repopulation after a mild injury, will be
characterized and analyzed. It is intended that further studies will lead to a
clarification of the entire wound healing process in the cornea. It has an
immediate relevance to the healing of surgical incisions and laser ablations
made in the course of refractive surgery. Since the reactions of cells to
injury in all tissues is likely to be similar, the results should have a wide
significance.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 12/1/84 → 6/30/03 |
Funding
- National Eye Institute: US$204,375.00
- National Eye Institute: US$204,375.00
- National Eye Institute: US$229,375.00
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Cell Biology
- Ophthalmology
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