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Abstract
Monoclonal antibody against keratan sulfate (KS) was used for immunofluorescent staining of sections of human corneas from 8 normal eyes, 19 with keratoconus, 4 with pellucid marginal degeneration, 5 with primary macular corneal dystrophy, and 1 with recurrent macular corneal dystrophy. The anti-KS monoclonal antibody did not stain the corneas with primary macular corneal dystrophy, but stained all other corneas to varying degrees. Staining intensity was weaker than normal in most keratoconus and pellucid marginal degeneration corneas, and was very weak in a case of macular corneal dystrophy that had recurred in a transplanted normal cornea. In several corneas with keratoconus, normal staining was seen at the periphery, and staining intensity decreased in the thinned central portion of the stroma. The decreased KS staining was not localized in stromal scar tissue found in the keratoconus and pellucid marginal degeneration corneas. Quantitation of relative staining intensity found keratoconus and pellucid marginal degeneration corneas to be 49% and 40% as intensely stained, respectively, as normal corneas, a statistically significant decrease (P less than 0.01). Distribution of staining intensities of the keratoconus corneas demonstrated a single modality. These results are in agreement with findings of previous biochemical studies, which show reduction of highly sulfated keratan sulfate epitopes in corneas from keratoconus and pellucid marginal degeneration, and absence of sulfated keratan sulfate epitopes in macular corneal dystrophy.