Electrostatic origin of in vitro aggregation of human γ-crystallin.

J Chem Phys

Department of Polymer Science and Engineering, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003, USA.

Published: September 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • The main proteins in the human eye lens, α-, β-, and γ-crystallins, are investigated for their interactions using dynamic light scattering.
  • Researchers found that γ-crystallin tends to aggregate into clusters in phosphate buffer solutions, while α-crystallin remains unaggregated on its own.
  • Mixing α-crystallin with γ-crystallin prevents the latter's aggregation and highlights that γ-crystallin aggregation is due to non-covalent electrostatic interactions rather than oxidation-related mechanisms commonly linked to cataracts.

Article Abstract

The proteins α-, β-, and γ-crystallins are the major components of the lens in the human eye. Using dynamic light scattering method, we have performed in vitro investigations of protein-protein interactions in dilute solutions of human γ-crystallin and α-crystallin. We find that γ-crystallin spontaneously aggregates into finite-sized clusters in phosphate buffer solutions. There are two distinct populations of unaggregated and aggregated γ-crystallins in these solutions. On the other hand, α-crystallin molecules are not aggregated into large clusters in solutions of α-crystallin alone. When α-crystallin and γ-crystallin are mixed in phosphate buffer solutions, we demonstrate that the clusters of γ-crystallin are prevented. By further investigating the roles of temperature, protein concentration, pH, salt concentration, and a reducing agent, we show that the aggregation of γ-crystallin under our in vitro conditions arises from non-covalent electrostatic interactions. In addition, we show that aggregation of γ-crystallin occurs under the dilute in vitro conditions even in the absence of oxidizing agents that can induce disulfide cross-links, long considered to be responsible for human cataracts. Aggregation of γ-crystallin when maintained under reducing conditions suggests that oxidation does not contribute to the aggregation in dilute solutions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3745490PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4816367DOI Listing

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