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A clearer
picture of Cloudy Eyes
Newswise — A new study appearing online March 21 in JBC
provides more insight into cataracts, the
leading cause of vision loss and blindness
in the elderly, finding that small pieces of
a perfectly normal protein become toxic
during the aging process.
A cataract results from deterioration in the highly ordered
assembly of crystallin proteins in the eye
lens. Normally, the ordered structure keeps
lenses clear and able to efficiently
transmit light.
However, crystallins gradually break down during aging,
causing the lens to become opaque and
scatter light instead. Besides age, other
risk factors such as diabetes, ultraviolet
radiation, or drugs like corticosteroids can
also contribute to cataracts.
Like cataracts themselves, the exact mechanisms governing
their formation are cloudy, but Krishna
Sharma and colleagues found that tiny bits
of crystallin greatly contribute to this
process.
They compared a range of human donor lenses and found that
aged and cataract lenses accumulated about
four times as many short (~10-20 amino
acids) crystallin fragments compared to
young lenses.
These fragments could readily bind full-length crystallins,
which disrupted their natural shape and
organization and caused them to become
insoluble.
Ironically, these tiny fragments are a by-product of the
eye’s efforts to stay healthy; when a
crystallin becomes damaged, other proteins
chew it up to remove it; but occasionally
the process is incomplete, leaving tiny
pieces that can cause greater damage.
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