4.7 Article

Human βA3/A1-crystallin splicing mutation causes cataracts by activating the unfolded protein response and inducing apoptosis in differentiating lens fiber cells

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2016.02.003

Keywords

Splice mutation; Cataract; Crystallin gene; Unfolded protein response; Apoptosis

Funding

  1. National Eye Institute [EY000281]

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beta gamma-Crystallins, having a uniquely stable two domain four Greek key structure, are crucial for transparency of the eye lens,. Mutations in lens crystallins have been proposed to cause cataract formation by a variety of mechanisms most of which involve destabilization of the protein fold. The underlying molecular mechanism for autosomal dominant zonular cataracts with sutural opacities in an Indian family caused by a c.215 + 1G > A splice mutation in the beta A3/Al-crystallin gene CRYBA1 was elucidated using three transgenic mice models. This mutation causes a splice defect in which the mutant mRNA escapes nonsense mediated decay by skipping both exons 3 and 4. Skipping these exons results in an in-frame deletion of the mRNA and synthesis of an unstable p.IIe33_Ala119del mutant beta A3/Al-crystallin protein. Transgenic expression of mutant beta A3/Al-crystallin but not the wild type protein results in toxicity and abnormalities in the maturation and orientation of differentiating lens fibers in c.97_357del CRYBA1 transgenic mice, leading to a small spherical lens, cataract, and often lens capsule rupture. On a cellular level, the lenses accumulated p.IIe33_Ala119del beta A3/Al-crystallin with resultant activation of the stress signaling pathway - unfolded protein response (UPR) and inhibition of normal protein synthesis, culminating in apoptosis. This highlights the mechanistic contrast between mild mutations that destabilize crystallins and other proteins, resulting in their being bound by the alpha-crystallins that buffer lens cells against damage by denatured proteins, and severely misfolded proteins that are not bound by alpha-crystallin but accumulate and have a direct toxic effect on lens cells, resulting in early onset cataracts. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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