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Publication : Autophagy and UPR in alpha-crystallin mutant knock-in mouse models of hereditary cataracts.

First Author  Andley UP Year  2016
Journal  Biochim Biophys Acta Volume  1860
Issue  1 Pt B Pages  234-9
PubMed ID  26071686 Mgi Jnum  J:256223
Mgi Id  MGI:6105667 Doi  10.1016/j.bbagen.2015.06.001
Citation  Andley UP, et al. (2016) Autophagy and UPR in alpha-crystallin mutant knock-in mouse models of hereditary cataracts. Biochim Biophys Acta 1860(1 Pt B):234-9
abstractText  BACKGROUND: Knock-in mice provide useful models of congenital and age-related cataracts caused by alpha-crystallin mutations. R49C alphaA-crystallin and R120G alphaB-crystallin mutations are linked with hereditary cataracts. Knock-in alphaA-R49C+/- heterozygotes develop cataracts by 1-2months, whereas homozygote mice have cataracts at birth. The R49C mutation drastically reduces lens protein water solubility and causes cell death in knock-in mouse lenses. Mutant crystallin cannot function as a chaperone, which leads to protein aggregation and lens opacity. Protein aggregation disrupts the lens fiber cell structure and normal development and causes cell death in epithelial and fiber cells. We determined what aspects of the wild-type phenotype are age-dependently altered in the mutant lens. METHODS: Wild-type, heterozygote (alphaA-R49C+/-), and homozygote (alphaA-R49C+/+) mouse lenses were assessed pre- and postnatally for lens morphology (electron microscopy, immunohistochemistry), and autophagy or unfolded protein response markers (immunoblotting). RESULTS: Morphology was altered by embryonic day 17 in R49C+/+ lenses; R49C+/- lens morphology was unaffected at this stage. Active autophagy in the lens epithelium of mutant lenses was indicated by the presence of autophagosomes using electron microscopy. Protein p62 levels, which are degraded specifically by autophagy, increased in alphaA-R49C mutant versus wild-type lenses, suggesting autophagy inhibition in the mutant lenses. The unfolded protein response marker XBP-1 was upregulated in adult lenses of alphaB-R120G+/+ mice, suggesting its role in lens opacification. CONCLUSIONS: Mutated crystallins alter lens morphology, autophagy, and stress responses. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE: Therapeutic modulation of autophagic pathways may improve protein degradation in cataractous lenses and reduce lens opacity. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Crystallin Biochemistry in Health and Disease.
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