Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0086543 (cataract)
29,165 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors studied a four-generation family with autosomal dominant congenital cataracts (ADCCs) using linkage analysis with 23 polymorphic phenotypic markers and DNA restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) detected by lens-specific DNA probes. A total of 19 family members were studied and the ten affected members had embryonal lens opacities. Close linkage was rejected with DNA probes encoding beta-crystallin, gamma-crystallin, and the major intrinsic protein of the lens fiber membrane (MIP) excluding defects of these genes as the cause of the cataract in this family. No statistically significant lod scores were produced with the polymorphic phenotypic markers. These results support the genetic heterogeneity of ADCCs.
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PMID:Genetic linkage analysis of autosomal dominant congenital cataracts with lens-specific DNA probes and polymorphic phenotypic markers. 317 13

Transgenic mice, homozygous for HIV-1 protease expression in the eye lens, display degradation of some lens crystallins and cytoskeletal proteins prior to cataract formation on postnatal days 23-25. Alterations to the internal lens hydration state also occur; therefore, the status of the aquaporin protein MIP26 was examined over postnatal days 16-25 to determine if it was altered during cataractogenesis. The MIP was identical in transgenic and control lenses until day 21. By postnatal day 25 (frank cataract), in the lenses obtained from transgenic animals, the 26-kDa band was absent and there was a concurrent increase in the proportion of MIP23. Immunoblotting demonstrated cleavage at the C terminus. Lenses were also maintained in an organ culture system to demonstrate that the cataractogenic process is inherent to the isolated lens and to determine the contribution of cysteine protease action. Organ culture experiments revealed a similar progression to nuclear cataract formation as seen in vivo. Two-dimensional gel analysis of the soluble lens crystallin fraction of organ cultured lenses revealed the same cleavage pattern as occurs in vivo. Organ culture of transgenic lenses with E64, a cysteine protease inhibitor, dramatically delayed cataractogenesis and prevented proteolytic cleavage of both MIP26 and crystallins. HIV-1 protease, while the trigger of cataract formation, does not appear to be the protease responsible for cleavage of MIP or lens crystallins. These results suggest that activation of endogenous cysteine protease activity is involved in the cleavage of these proteins and occurs downstream of HIV-1 protease action.
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PMID:Cysteine protease activated by expression of HIV-1 protease in transgenic mice. MIP26 (aquaporin-0) cleavage and cataract formation in vivo and ex vivo. 894 20

1. It now appears that when water crosses an endothelium which is not fenestrated, or an epithelium with tight junctions, it does so rapidly, and with low energy cost, only if the cell membrane contains an adequate number of specific water channels, encoded by one of at least six different genes. 2. The water channel genes so far cloned encode a series of integral membrane proteins called aquaporins, all of approximately 30 kDa (265-282 amino acids), in the unglycosylated state. All but one (AQP3) are specific water channels and all but one (AQP4) are inactivated by mercurial compounds. 3. Aquaporin 0 is the major (60%) intrinsic protein (MIP) of lens fibre cells of the eye. Mutations in this gene are associated with cataract formation in mice. 4. Aquaporin 1, also called CHIP-28, exists in the membrane as a homotetramer, and is present in red blood cells, the choroid plexus, the proximal tubule and descending limb of the loop of Henle in the kidney as well as in many other sites. Surprisingly, no pathological consequence is known in patients lacking a functional AQP1 gene. 5. Aquaporin 2, also called WCH-CD, is the water channel of the principal cell of the cortical and medullary collecting duct, and is located in cytoplasmic vesicles unless arginine vasopressin is acting, when it is translocated to the apical membrane by synaptobrevins or vesicle associated membrane protein 2 (VAMP2). Lack of a functional AQP2 gene leads to a rare form of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. 6. Aquaporins 3, 4, and 5 are located in many tissues-AQP3 and AQP4 being in the basolateral membrane of the renal cortical and medullary principal cell, as well as in the gastrointestinal tract (AQP3) and the brain (AQP4). 7. Four sequences are known for urea transporters HUT11-the urea transporter of the human red cell membrane, and HUT2, rUT2, rbUT2-the arginine vasopressin inducible urea transporters of the human, rat and rabbit kidney. They are specifically permeable to urea, not to water, and are claimed to be inhibited by phloretin. 8. The water channel proteins contain six membrane-spanning regions, whilst the urea transporters are thought to contain at least 10 membrane spanning segments. 9. Very little work has examined the ontogeny of these proteins, except in the rat, and virtually nothing is known of the expression of these genes in pregnancy or in any disorder of fluid balance in the mother or foetus.
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PMID:Water channels and urea transporters. 904 98

Human inherited cataract is both clinically diverse and genetically heterogeneous. Here we report the identification of the first mutations affecting the major intrinsic protein of the lens, MIP, encoded by the gene MIP on 12q14. MIP is a member of the aquaporin family of membrane-bound water channels. The mutations identified are predicted to disturb water flux across the lens cell membrane.
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PMID:Missense mutations in MIP underlie autosomal dominant 'polymorphic' and lamellar cataracts linked to 12q. 1080 46

Opacities in the crystalline lens of eye appear with high frequency in the general population. Dominantly inherited cataracts with differing clinical features were found in two families carrying different point mutations in the gene encoding lens water channel protein AQP0 (major intrinsic protein, MIP). Families with E134G have a uni-lamellar cataract which is stable after birth, whereas families with T138R have multi-focal opacities which increase throughout life. To establish pathophysiological relevance of cataract formation, the Xenopus laevis oocyte expression system was employed to evaluate functional defects in the mutant proteins, E134G and T138R. Both substitutions cause loss of membrane water channel activity due to impaired trafficking of the mutant proteins to the oocyte plasma membrane. Although missense mutations in AQP1 and AQP2 proteins are known to result in recessive traits in vivo and in vitro, when E134G or T138R are co-expressed with wild-type AQP0 protein, the mutant proteins exhibit dominant negative behaviour. To our knowledge, these studies represent the first in vitro demonstration of functionally defective AQP0 protein from humans with congenital cataracts. Moreover, these observations predict that less severe defects in the AQP0 protein may contribute to lens opacity in patients with common, less fulminant forms of cataracts.
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PMID:Functional impairment of lens aquaporin in two families with dominantly inherited cataracts. 1100 37

Several families of growth factors have been identified as regulators of cell fate in the developing lens. Members of the fibroblast growth factor family are potent inducers of lens fiber differentiation. Members of the transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta) family, particularly bone morphogenetic proteins, have also been implicated in various stages of lens and ocular development, including lens induction and lens placode formation. However, at later stages of lens development, TGFbeta family members have been shown to induce pathological changes in lens epithelial cells similar to those seen in forms of human subcapsular cataract. Previous studies have shown that type I and type II TGFbeta receptors, in addition to being expressed in the epithelium, are also expressed in patterns consistent with a role in lens fiber differentiation. In this study we have investigated the consequences of disrupting TGFbeta signaling during lens fiber differentiation by using the mouse alphaA-crystallin promoter to overexpress mutant (kinase deficient), dominant-negative forms of either type I or type II TGFbeta receptors in the lens fibers of transgenic mice. Mice expressing these transgenes had pronounced bilateral nuclear cataracts. The phenotype was characterized by attenuated lens fiber elongation in the cortex and disruption of fiber differentiation, culminating in fiber cell apoptosis and degeneration in the lens nucleus. Inhibition of TGFbeta signaling resulted in altered expression patterns of the fiber-specific proteins, alpha-crystallin, filensin, phakinin and MIP. In addition, in an in vitro assay of cell migration, explanted lens cells from transgenic mice showed impaired migration on laminin and a lack of actin filament assembly, compared with cells from wild-type mice. These results indicate that TGFbeta signaling is a key event during fiber differentiation and is required for completion of terminal differentiation.
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PMID:Requirement for TGFbeta receptor signaling during terminal lens fiber differentiation. 1164 Dec 23

The lens capsule, which is also called the lens basement membrane, is a specialized extracellular matrix produced anteriorly by the lens epithelium and posteriorly by newly differentiated fiber cells. SPARC (secreted protein, acidic and rich in cysteine) is a matricellular glycoprotein that regulates cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions, cellular proliferation and differentiation, and the expression of genes encoding extracellular matrix components. SPARC-null mice exhibit lens opacity 1 month after birth and mature cataract and capsular rupture at 5-7 months. In this study, we report disruption of the structural integrity of the lens capsule in mice lacking SPARC. The major structural protein of basement membrane, collagen type IV, in the lens capsule was substantially altered in the absence of SPARC. The lens cells immediately beneath the capsule showed aberrant morphology, with numerous protrusions into the lens basement membrane. SPARC-null lenses at 1 month of age exhibited an increased penetration of dye or radioactive tracer through the capsule, as well as a higher content of water than their wild-type counterparts. Moreover, SPARC-null fibers exhibited swelling as early as 1 month of age; by 3 months, all the fiber cells appeared swollen to a marked degree. By contrast, the absence of SPARC had no apparent morphological effect on the early stages of lens formation, cell proliferation or fiber cell differentiation. Degradation of crystallins and MIP 26, or changes in the levels of these proteins, were not detected. These results underscore the importance of the capsular extracellular matrix in the maintenance of lens transparency and indicate that SPARC participates in the synthesis, assembly and/or stabilization of the lens basement membrane.
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PMID:Alterations in the lens capsule contribute to cataractogenesis in SPARC-null mice. 1207 65

A unique sutural cataract was observed in a 4-generation German family to be transmitted as an isolated autosomal, dominant trait. Since mutations in the gamma-crystallin encoding CRYG genes have previously been demonstrated to be the most frequent reason for isolated congenital cataracts, all 4 active CRYG genes have been sequenced. A single base-pair change in the CRYGA gene has been shown, leading to a premature stop codon. This was not observed in 170 control individuals. However, it did not segregate with the disease phenotype. This is the first truncating mutation in an active CRYG gene without a dominant phenotype. As the CRYGA mutation did not explain the cataract, several other candidate loci (CCV, GJA8, CRYBB2, BFSP2, MIP, GJA8, CENTRAL POUCH-LIKE, CRYBA1) were investigated by microsatellite markers and linkage analysis, but they were excluded based on the combination of haplotype analysis and two-point linkage analysis. The phenotype in this family is due to a mutation in another sutural cataract gene yet to be identified.
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PMID:Further genetic heterogeneity for autosomal dominant human sutural cataracts. 1264 46

Posterior capsule opacification is the main complication of cataract surgery. Using adenovirus-mediated gene transfer, we recently reported that it was feasible to prevent PCO by overexpressing pro-apoptotic molecules such as pro-caspase 3 or Bax in the residual lens epithelial cells post-cataract surgery. However, this approach is feasible only if gene transfer can be restricted to the residual cells responsible for PCO. Initially, we tested an adenovirus (human serotype 5, HAd5), a lentivirus (HIV) and an oncoretrovirus (MLV) vector for the their in vivo transduction efficiency of rabbit lens cells. We found that HAd5 vectors were the most efficient (>90% of the cells could be transduced). Six potential lens-specific promoters were then cloned into HAd5 vectors and assayed for their ability to target expression to a specific population of cells, using in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo rabbit tissues and human lens capsular bags. We found that the LEP503, MIP and Filensin promoters induced strong lens-specific expression of a reporter gene, in human lens cells. Following this ex vivo assay, we showed in a rabbit PCO model that gene transfer could be spatially restricted to the capsular bag by confining the vector with Matrigel. Our combined approach using a lens-specific promoter and a biocompatible gel should render feasible a novel therapeutic strategy for PCO that targets the remaining lens cells.
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PMID:Lens cell targetting for gene therapy of prevention of posterior capsule opacification. 1672 94

Much of our knowledge about the function of genes in cataracts has been derived from the molecular analysis of spontaneous or induced mutations in the mouse. Mutations affecting the mouse lens can be identified easily by visual inspection, and a remarkable number of mutant lines have been characterized. In contrast to humans, most of the genetic mouse cataract models suffer from congenital cataracts, and only a few develop cataracts in old age. Therefore, the mouse cataract models contributed rather to the understanding of lens development than to the ageing process taking place in the lens. A prerequisite for molecular analysis is the chromosomal localization of the gene. In this review, several mouse models will be discussed with emphasis on the underlying genetic basis rather than the morphological features as exemplified by the following: (i) the most frequent mutations in congenital cataracts affect genes coding for gamma-crystallins (gene symbol: Cryg); (ii) some postnatal, progressive cataracts have been characterized by mutations in the beta-crystallin encoding genes (Cryb); (iii) mutations in genes coding for membrane proteins like MIP or connexins lead to congenital cataracts; (iv) mutations in genes coding for transcription factors such as FoxE3, Maf, Sox1, and Six5 cause cataracts; (v) mouse models suffering from hereditary age-related cataracts (e.g. Emory cataract) have not yet been characterized genetically. In conclusion, a broad variety of hereditary congenital cataracts are well understood at the molecular level. Further, expression patterns of the affected genes in several other tissues and organs outside the eye, is making it increasingly clear that isolated cataracts are the exception rather than the rule. By further understanding the pleiotropic effects of these genes, we might recognize cataracts as an easily visible biomarker for a number of systemic syndromes.
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PMID:Mouse models of cataract. 2009 Feb 8


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