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18100

Comparative studies on the corneal structural adaptation of two rodents inhabiting different environments

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Last updated: 24 Dec 2024

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Abstract

The corneas of Rattus rattus and Meriones shawi are composed of three main layers; an outer epithelium, a middle stroma (basement membrane, total stroma and Descemet's membrane) and an inner endothelium. The mean thickness of the epithelium, total stroma, Descemet's membrane, and endothelium was about 52 ± 7.3 μm, 275 ±18.7 μm, 5.5 ± 0.7 μm, and 7.5±0.23μminR.rattus,whereasitwas38 ± 5.8μm,124 ±4.7μm,4 ±0.21μm,and 4.2 ± 0.17 μm in M. shawi. In R. rattus and M. shawi, the outermost cells of the corneal epithelium are mostly polygonal and hexagonal in shape with nearly regular borders and show a dense pattern of microplicae with different scatter electron that exhibits three and two polymorphic appearances, respectively. Type A: numerous light cells with dense microplicae; type B: many dark cells with a moderate density of microplicae, and type C: few dark cells with a less density of microplicae are found in R. rattus; whereas, types A and B are found in M. shawi. In both investigated species, the epithelial cells are characterized by some structural components, such as glycocalyx, fibrous components and tight junction between these cells, to resist the impact of the external stressed factors and to protect the underlying tissue, as well as to maintain an excellent transparency of the cornea. Among these structures, the cytokeratin filaments are the major components of the cytoplasm of the corneal epithelial cells (basal, polygonal, wing and squamous cells). Actin filaments are also found in the corneal epithelial cells, but they are prominent within the apical epithelial cells. In R. rattus, the stroma is formed of an outer lamellar zone and an inner lamellar one; the latter is thicker and characterized by its interfibrillar spaces between the bundles of wavy dissociated collagen fibrils, which are arranged in an orthogonal manner. In M. shawi, however, the stroma is formed of one lamellar zone of flattened bundles of highly wavy and branched collagen fibrils, which are composed of perpendicular fibrillae alternating with longitudinal ones. In R. rattus, the SEM showed that the endothelial cell surfaces are slightly bulging with many blebs, whereas in M. shawi, it showed that the surfaces of the endothelial cells are flattened and nearly smooth. In conclusion, the transparency of the cornea, may be highly attributed to the increase in the thickness of the stroma, the presence of stromal interfibrillar spaces and the case of the stromal swelling. These aforementioned features are found in the corneal stroma of R. rattus, which live in different habitats of varying degrees of density such as water and dry or humid air, whereas these features are lacking in M. shawi, which live only in arid zones.  

DOI

10.21608/ejhm.2005.18100

Keywords

cornea, Mammals, Rodents, adaptation, environment, LM, SEM, TEM

Authors

First Name

El-Sayed Fikri Ali

Last Name

El-Dawi

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Affiliation

Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt.

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Orcid

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First Name

Hamdy

Last Name

Aly

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt

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Volume

20

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

3768

Issue Date

2005-07-01

Receive Date

2018-10-31

Publish Date

2005-07-01

Page Start

131

Page End

147

Print ISSN

1687-2002

Online ISSN

2090-7125

Link

https://ejhm.journals.ekb.eg/article_18100.html

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https://ejhm.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=18100

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13

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Original Article

Type Code

606

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Egyptian Journal of Hospital Medicine

Publication Link

https://ejhm.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Comparative studies on the corneal structural adaptation of two rodents inhabiting different environments

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023