Word document with supplementary figures and details of primers and siRNAs. from The core planar cell polarity gene, <i>Vangl2</i>, directs adult corneal epithelial cell alignment and migration

Abstract

This study shows that the core planar cell polarity (PCP) genes direct the aligned cell migration in the adult corneal epithelium, a stratified squamous epithelium on the outer surface of the vertebrate eye. Expression of multiple core PCP genes was demonstrated in the adult corneal epithelium. PCP components were manipulated genetically and pharmacologically in human and mouse corneal epithelial cells <i>in vivo</i> and <i>in vitro</i>. Knockdown of <i>VANGL2</i> reduced the directional component of migration of human corneal epithelial (HCE) cells without affecting speed. It was shown that signalling through PCP mediators, dishevelled, dishevelled-associated activator of morphogenesis and Rho-associated protein kinase directs the alignment of HCEs by affecting cytoskeletal reorganization. Cells in which <i>VANGL2</i> were disrupted tended to misalign on grooved surfaces and migrate across, rather than parallel to the grooves. Adult corneal epithelial cells in which <i>Vangl2</i> had been conditionally deleted showed a reduced rate of wound-healing migration. Conditional deletion of <i>Vangl2</i> in the mouse corneal epithelium ablated the normal highly stereotyped patterns of centripetal cell migration <i>in vivo</i> from the periphery (limbus) to the centre of the cornea. Corneal opacity owing to chronic wounding is a major cause of degenerative blindness across the world, and this study shows that Vangl2 activity is required for directional corneal epithelial migration

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