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Original Article

Distinctive distribution of HLA class II presenting and bone marrow derived cells in the anterior segment of human eyes

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Pages 1173-1183 | Received 03 Apr 1992, Accepted 09 Nov 1992, Published online: 02 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Cells of bone marrow origin that normally occupy the stroma of the murine iris and ciliary body have been implicated in the immune phenomenon, anterior chamber associated immune deviation (ACAID). Following injection of antigen into the anterior chamber, cells of this type deliver an ACAID inducing signal into the systemic circulation, presumably through the outflow tract. In an effort to identify such cells in man, anterior chambers of 34 human donor eyes of different age groups were stained immunocytochemically with monoclonal antibodies directed at HLA class II molecules, CD 45 (a molecular marker of bone marrow-derived cells) and macrophage-associated membrane molecules (CD 68, CD 14). Within the outflow tissue, the cells of the filtering trabecular meshwork stained with none of those reagents. However, infrequent single, dispersed, dendritic cells were positively stained in the intertrabecular spaces. More numerous labelled cells were found in the anterior-and posterior-most portions of the non-filtering part of the trabecular meshwork. These cells were continuous with stained cells adjacent to the outer wall of Schlemm's canal and to the collector channels. Numerous labelled cells were seen in the vicinity of the intra- and episcleral vessels, the ciliary meshwork, the stroma of the ciliary muscle and epithelial processes, and the iris stroma. With advancing age, increasing numbers of CD 45+, HLA class II expressing cells appeared to accumulate in the so-called uveoscleral pathway.

These results indicate that bone marrow-derived cells with the potential to function in ACAID induction reside within human eyes, and that cells of this type are located not only in the stroma of iris and ciliary body, but within the non-filtering portions of the trabecular meshwork and the uveoscleral pathway. The appearance of rare CD 45+ cells “in transit” in the filtering trabecular meshwork is compatible with the view that cells carrying ACAID-inducing signals to the systemic immune apparatus escape from the eye by this route.

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