'Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)'
Abstract
Purpose: To determine the cell properties of adult human corneal keratocytes when
challenged in the chick embryonic environment.
Methods: Cultured human keratocytes were injected along cranial neural crest
migratory pathways in chick embryos. Human keratocytes were also cultured under
various conditions and differentiated into either fibroblasts or myofibroblasts, then
transplanted into the chick embryo. Migration of the injected cells was determined
by immunohistochemistry using human cell-specific markers and markers of crest
derivatives.
Results: Injected human keratocytes proliferated and migrated ventrally adjacent
to host neural crest cells. They contributed to numerous neural crest-derived tissues
including cranial blood vessels, ocular tissues, musculature of the mandibular process,
and cardiac cushion tissue.
Conclusions: Adult human corneal keratocytes that have undergone terminal
differentiation can be induced to form cranial neural crest derivatives when grafted
into an embryonic environment