Autosomal dominant congenital nuclear cataract

  • 文章类型: Journal Article
    Cataract is a lens opacification disease prevalent worldwide. Cataract-causing mutations in crystallins generally lead to the formation of light-scattering particles in the lens. However, it remains unclear for the detailed structural and pathological mechanisms of most mutations. In this study, we showed that the G129C mutation in γC-crystallin, which is associated with autosomal dominant congenital nuclear cataract, perturbed the unfolding process by promoting the accumulation of two distinct aggregation-prone intermediates under mild denaturing conditions. The abnormally accumulated intermediates escaped from the chaperone-like function of αA-crystallin during refolding. Molecular dynamics simulations indicated that the mutation altered domain pairing geometry and allowed the penetration of extra solvent molecules into the domain binding interface, thereby weakening domain binding energy. Under mild denaturation conditions, the increased domain movements may facilitate the formation of non-native oligomers via domain swapping, which further assembled into amyloid-like fibrils. The intermediate that appeared at 1.6M guanidine hydrochloride was more compact and less aggregatory than the one populated at 0.9 M guanidine hydrochloride, which was caused by the increased solvation of acidic residues in the ion-pairing network via the competitive binding of guanidinium ions. More importantly, both the amyloid-like fibrils preformed in vitro and intracellular aggresomes formed by exogenously overexpressed mutant proteins significantly inhibited cell proliferation and induced cell death. The combined data from spectroscopic, structural and cellular studies strongly suggest that both the formation of light-scattering aggregates and the toxic effects of the aggregates may contribute to the onset and development of cataract.
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  • 文章类型: Journal Article
    Cataract is characterized by the formation of light-scattering protein aggregates in the lens. β/γ-Crystallins are the predominant structural proteins in the cytosol of lens fiber cells, and more than fifty β/γ-crystallin mutations have been linked to autosomal dominant congenital cataract. However, the structural role of these mutations in the formation of the core structures of amorphous aggregates or amyloid-like fibrils has not been elucidated yet. In this research, we studied the effects of the V187M and R188H mutations on the aggregation and fibrillization of βB2-crystallin during acid denaturation. The behavior of V187M was the same as the WT protein, suggesting that the residue at position 187 contributed little to the aggregation/fibrillization process. R188H promoted the formation of amorphous aggregates at pH above 3 and accelerated fibrillization at pH 3. The distinct behaviors of the mutants suggested that the residue at position 188 might play a regulatory role in βB2-crystallin aggregation/fibrillization but not reside in the core of the aggregates/fibrils.
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  • 文章类型: Journal Article
    Congenital cataract is the leading cause of childhood blindness worldwide. Investigations of the effects of inherited mutations on protein structure and function not only help us to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying congenital hereditary cataract, but also facilitate the study of complicated cataract and non-lens abnormities caused by lens-specific genes. In this research, we studied the effects of the V187M, V187E and R188H mutations on βB2-crystallin structure and stability using a combination of biophysical, cellular and molecular dynamic simulation analysis. Both V187 and R188 are located at the last strand of βB2-crystallin Greek-key motif 4. All of the three mutations promoted βB2-crystallin aggregation in vitro and at the cellular level. These three mutations affected βB2-crystallin quite differentially: V187M influenced the hydrophobic core of the C-terminal domain, V187E was a Greek-key motif breaker with the disruption of the backbone H-bonding network, while R188H perturbed the dynamic oligomeric equilibrium by dissociating the dimer and stabilizing the tetramer. Our results highlighted the importance of the last strand in the structural integrity, folding, assembly and stability of β-crystallins. More importantly, we proposed that the perturbation of the dynamic equilibrium between β-crystallin oligomers was an important mechanism of congenital hereditary cataract. The selective stabilization of one specific high-order oligomer by mutations might also be deleterious to the stability and folding of the β-crystalllin homomers and heteromers. The long-term structural stability and functional maintenance of β-crystallins are achieved by the precisely regulated oligomeric equilibrium.
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