Multimodal imaging quality control of epithelia regenerated with cultured human donor corneal limbal epithelial stem cells.
Marco LombardoSebastiano SerraoVanessa BarbaroEnzo Di IorioGiuseppe LombardoPublished in: Scientific reports (2017)
Current imaging techniques for the characterization of differentiated corneal limbal stem cells are destructive and cannot be used in eye bank for monitoring the regenerated epithelium in culture. We presented a minimally invasive, multimodal, marker-free imaging method for the investigation of epithelia regenerated with cultured human donor corneal limbal epithelial stem cells. Two-photon fluorescence and harmonic generation signals were collected from specimens in culture and used for evaluating the structure and morphology of epithelia cultured on two different bio-scaffolds; in addition, donor human corneal tissues were used as controls. The method provided reliable information on the organization of cellular and extracellular components of biomaterial substrates and was highly sensitive to determine differences between the density packing arrangement of epithelial cells of different biomaterials without relying on inferences from exogenous labels. The present minimally invasive standardized quality control methodology can be reliably translated to eye banks and used for monitoring harvested corneal limbal stem cells growth and differentiation in bioengineered materials.
Keyphrases
- stem cells
- endothelial cells
- quality control
- minimally invasive
- optical coherence tomography
- high resolution
- wound healing
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- cell therapy
- pluripotent stem cells
- cataract surgery
- pain management
- healthcare
- tissue engineering
- social media
- photodynamic therapy
- robot assisted
- liquid chromatography
- solid phase extraction