Oxidative-stress related increase in keratoconus tear MDA and GPX3 while NRF2-antioxidant functions decrease in stromal cells
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Keratoconus (KC) is a common eye disease where the cornea undergoes degenerative thinning and steepening. The absence of biomarkers for early diagnosis prior to the onset of overt corneal phenotypes and the lack of curative treatments rooted in a fundamental understanding of KC biology remain significant challenges. To address these issues, we investigated the role of unresolved oxidative stress in KC pathogenesis. Malondialdehyde (MDA) a lipid peroxidation byproduct that accumulates during oxidative stress was significantly elevated in the tears of KC patients compared to unaffected controls and positively correlated with maximal keratometry (Kmax), a measure of KC severity. Similarly, the secreted antioxidant glutathione peroxidase 3 (GPX3), was significantly increased in patient tears, and strongly correlated with Kmax. In a cell culture model of oxidative stress, KC corneal stromal cells displayed increased apoptosis and suboptimal activation of NRF2, a transcription factor master regulator of antioxidant genes. Conversely, inhibition of NRF2 in donor stromal cells elicited KC-like cellular phenotype, whereas sulforaphane, an NRF2 booster restored antioxidant gene expression and the deposition of cornea-typical collagens. Our study identified cellular antioxidant signaling dysregulations in keratoconus where sulforaphane treatment may be restorative. Consistent increases in patient tear MDA and GPX3 present these as promising biomarkers for KC diagnosis and severity predictions.