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Heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) of the ocular lens

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.preteyeres.2022.101118

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HSPGs are present in various parts of the eye and play a role in regulating the activity of signaling molecules involved in eye development and homeostasis. The specific functions of individual HSPG family members and their associated sulfated HS chains are not yet fully understood. The crystalline lens, a well-studied ocular tissue, is used as a model to explore the expression and unique roles of HSPGs. Changes in HSPG expression and function in the lens can lead to pathology or tissue repair, and may have broader implications for the development of therapeutics for eye and systemic diseases.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) reside in most cells; on their surface, in the pericellular milieu and/or extracellular matrix. In the eye, HSPGs can orchestrate the activity of key signalling molecules found in the ocular environment that promote its development and homeostasis. To date, our understanding of the specific roles played by individual HSPG family members, and the heterogeneity of their associated sulfated HS chains, is in its infancy. The crystalline lens is a relatively simple and well characterised ocular tissue that provides an ideal stage to showcase and model the expression and unique roles of individual HSPGs. Individual HSPG core proteins are differentially localised to eye tissues in a temporal and spatial developmental-and cell-type specific manner, and their loss or functional disruption results in unique phenotypic outcomes for the lens, and other ocular tissues. More recent work has found that different HS sulfation enzymes are also presented in a cell-and tissue-specific manner, and that disruption of these different sulfation patterns affects specific HS-protein interactions. Not surprisingly, these sulfated HS chains have also been reported to be required for lens and eye development, with dysregulation of HS chain structure and function leading to pathogenesis and eye-related phenotypes. In the lens, HSPGs undergo significant and specific changes in expression and function that can drive pathology, or in some cases, promote tissue repair. As master signalling regulators, HSPGs may one day serve as valuable biomarkers, and even as putative targets for the development of novel therapeutics, not only for the eye but for many other systemic pathologies.

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