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Aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibition blocks mucosal fibrosis in human and mouse ocular scarring
Sarah D. Ahadome, David J. Abraham, Suryanarayana Rayapureddi, Valerie P. Saw, Daniel R. Saban, Virginia L. Calder, Jill T. Norman, Markella Ponticos, Julie T. Daniels, John K. Dart
Sarah D. Ahadome, David J. Abraham, Suryanarayana Rayapureddi, Valerie P. Saw, Daniel R. Saban, Virginia L. Calder, Jill T. Norman, Markella Ponticos, Julie T. Daniels, John K. Dart
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Research Article Inflammation Ophthalmology

Aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibition blocks mucosal fibrosis in human and mouse ocular scarring

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Abstract

Mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) is a systemic mucosal scarring disease, commonly causing blindness, for which there is no antifibrotic therapy. Aldehyde dehydrogenase family 1 (ALDH1) is upregulated in both ocular MMP (OMMP) conjunctiva and cultured fibroblasts. Application of the ALDH metabolite, retinoic acid (RA), to normal human conjunctival fibroblasts in vitro induced a diseased phenotype. Conversely, application of ALDH inhibitors, including disulfiram, to OMMP fibroblasts in vitro restored their functionality to that of normal controls. ALDH1 is also upregulated in the mucosa of the mouse model of scarring allergic eye disease (AED), used here as a surrogate for OMMP, in which topical application of disulfiram decreased fibrosis in vivo. These data suggest that progressive scarring in OMMP results from ALDH/RA fibroblast autoregulation, that the ALDH1 subfamily has a central role in immune-mediated ocular mucosal scarring, and that ALDH inhibition with disulfiram is a potential and readily translatable antifibrotic therapy.

Authors

Sarah D. Ahadome, David J. Abraham, Suryanarayana Rayapureddi, Valerie P. Saw, Daniel R. Saban, Virginia L. Calder, Jill T. Norman, Markella Ponticos, Julie T. Daniels, John K. Dart

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Figure 1

Ocular mucous membrane pemphigoid (OMMP): Clinical spectrum and morbidity.

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Ocular mucous membrane pemphigoid (OMMP): Clinical spectrum and morbidit...
(A) Acute inflammation resulting in conjunctival scarring after 4 months. (B) Same eye as shown in A after partial control of inflammation with cyclophosphamide and prednisolone. (C) More advanced scarring resulting in restricted lid and eye movement and secondary corneal drying (arrow) due to reduced rewetting by the lids. (D) In-turning lower lid (entropion) and lash abrasion (trichiasis) in an inflamed (pemphigoid inflamed [PemI] phenotype) eye with resolution of inflammation (pemphigoid uninflamed [PemU] phenotype) in the same eye shown in E but 2 years after initial immunosuppressive treatment with cyclophosphamide and prednisolone, followed by dapsone for maintenance of inflammation control. (F) End-stage OMMP with the lids fused to the globe (frozen globe or ankyloblepharon) and extreme dryness leading to surface keratinization.

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