The effect of macromolecular crowders as a supplement to serum free media on human corneal stromal cells proliferation and marker expression
Weaam Ahmed Sultan, Che J. Connon

TL;DR
Adding macromolecular crowders to serum-free media boosts corneal cell growth and maintains their natural traits, which is promising for regenerative therapies.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that macromolecular crowders in serum-free media can enhance corneal keratocyte proliferation while preserving their quiescent phenotype.
Findings
MMCs increased cell proliferation and expression of quiescent markers like ALDH3A1 and Collagen V.
MMCs reduced fibroblast markers such as MMP2 and α smooth muscle actin.
Serum-free media with MMCs better mimics the native corneal environment and supports regenerative applications.
Abstract
Native human corneal stromal keratocytes (HCSKs) deposit extracellular matrix (ECM) to maintain corneal homeostasis, repair, and regeneration. Adding macromolecular crowders (MMCs) to culture media encourages HCSKs to produce ECM in vitro. However, MMCs may also be used as serum or growth factor replacement for the in vitro culture of cells. This could control phenotype and reduce the cost of future industrial-scale production of cells such as HCSKs for predicted therapeutic applications in corneal repair. To identify the effects of adding (MMCs) to a serum-free medium and the possible role of MMCs in supporting the growth of HCSKs in an undifferentiated phenotype. Primary HCSKs isolated from human corneas were cultured in serum-free media supplemented with different concentrations of MMCs additive (0%, 4%, and 8%). The influence of the MMCs on proliferation and protein expression was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCorneal Surgery and Treatments · Corneal surgery and disorders · Ocular Surface and Contact Lens
