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Molecular Processes Implicated in Human Age-Related Nuclear Cataract

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posted on 2024-11-15, 02:14 authored by Roger TruscottRoger Truscott, Michael FriedrichMichael Friedrich
Human age-related nuclear cataract is commonly characterized by four biochemical features that involve modifications to the structural proteins that constitute the bulk of the lens: coloration, oxidation, insolubility, and covalent cross-linking. Each of these is progressive and increases as the cataract worsens. Significant progress has been made in understanding the origin of the factors that underpin the loss of lens transparency. Of these four hallmarks of cataract, it is protein-protein cross-linking that has been the most intransigent, and it is only recently, with the advent of proteomic methodology, that mechanisms are being elucidated. A diverse range of cross-linking processes involving several amino acids have been uncovered. Although other hypotheses for the etiology of cataract have been advanced, it is likely that spontaneous decomposition of the structural proteins of the lens, which do not turn over, is responsible for the age-related changes to the properties of the lens and, ultimately, for cataract. Cataract may represent the first and best characterized of a number of human age-related diseases where spontaneous protein modification leads to ongoing deterioration and, ultimately, a loss of tissue function.

History

Citation

Truscott, R. J. W. & Friedrich, M. G. (2019). Molecular Processes Implicated in Human Age-Related Nuclear Cataract. Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, 60 (15), 5007-5021.

Journal title

Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science

Volume

60

Issue

15

Pagination

5007-5021

Language

English

RIS ID

140522

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