4.6 Article

The Patched 1 Tumor-Suppressor Gene Protects the Mouse Lens from Spontaneous and Radiation-Induced Cataract

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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
卷 185, 期 1, 页码 85-95

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2014.09.019

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  1. Unit of Radiation Biology and Human Health, l'Energia e lo Sviluppo Economico Sostenibile, Intramural Program

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Age-related cataract is the most common cause of visual impairment. Moreover, traumatic cataracts form after injury to the eye, including radiation damage. We report herein that sonic hedgehog (Shh) signaling plays a key role in cataract development and in normal lens response to radiation injury. Mice heterozygous for Patched 1 (Ptch1), the Shh receptor and negative regulator of the pathway, develop spontaneous cataract and are highly susceptible to cataract induction by exposure to ionizing radiation in early postnatal age, when lens epithelial cells undergo rapid expansion in the Lens epithelium. Neonatally irradiated and control Ptch1(+/-) mice were compared for markers of progenitors, Shh pathway activation, and epithelial-to-mesenchymat transition (EMT). Molecular analyses showed increased expression of the EMT-related transforming growth factor beta/Smad signaling pathway in the neonatally irradiated lens, and up-regulation of mesenchymaL markers Zeb1 and Vim. We further show a link between proliferation and the sternness property of lens epithelial cells, controlled by Shh. Our results suggest that Shh and transforming growth factor beta signaling cooperate to promote Ptch1-associated cataract development by activating EMT, and that the Nanog marker of pluripotent cells may act as the primary transcription factor on which both signaling pathways converge after damage. These findings highlight a novel function of Shh signaling unrelated to cancer and provide a new animal model to investigate the molecular pathogenesis of cataract formation.

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