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Publication : Probing the changes in gene expression due to α-crystallin mutations in mouse models of hereditary human cataract.

First Author  Andley UP Year  2018
Journal  PLoS One Volume  13
Issue  1 Pages  e0190817
PubMed ID  29338044 Mgi Jnum  J:256727
Mgi Id  MGI:6112893 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0190817
Citation  Andley UP, et al. (2018) Probing the changes in gene expression due to alpha-crystallin mutations in mouse models of hereditary human cataract. PLoS One 13(1):e0190817
abstractText  The mammalian eye lens expresses a high concentration of crystallins (alpha, beta and gamma-crystallins) to maintain the refractive index essential for lens transparency. Crystallins are long-lived proteins that do not turnover throughout life. The structural destabilization of crystallins by UV exposure, glycation, oxidative stress and mutations in crystallin genes leads to protein aggregation and development of cataracts. Several destabilizing mutations in crystallin genes are linked with human autosomal dominant hereditary cataracts. To investigate the mechanism by which the alpha-crystallin mutations Cryaa-R49C and Cryab-R120G lead to cataract formation, we determined whether these mutations cause an altered expression of specific transcripts in the lens at an early postnatal age by RNA-seq analysis. Using knock-in mouse models previously generated in our laboratory, in the present work, we identified genes that exhibited altered abundance in the mutant lenses, including decreased transcripts for Clic5, an intracellular water channel in Cryaa-R49C heterozygous mutant lenses, and increased transcripts for Eno1b in Cryab-R120G heterozygous mutant lenses. In addition, RNA-seq analysis revealed increased histones H2B, H2A, and H4 gene expression in Cryaa-R49C mutant lenses, suggesting that the alphaA-crystallin mutation regulates histone expression via a transcriptional mechanism. Additionally, these studies confirmed the increased expression of histones H2B, H2A, and H4 by proteomic analysis of Cryaa-R49C knock-in and Cryaa;Cryab gene knockout lenses reported previously. Taken together, these findings offer additional insight into the early transcriptional changes caused by Cryaa and Cryab mutations associated with autosomal dominant human cataracts, and indicate that the transcript levels of certain genes are affected by the expression of mutant alpha-crystallin in vivo.
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