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Development ePress online publication date 12 Apr 2006
doi: 10.1242/dev.02361


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Research Article: Development and Disease

Diverse gap junctions modulate distinct mechanisms for fiber cell formation during lens development and cataractogenesis


Chun-hong Xia, Haiquan Liu, Debra Cheung, Catherine Cheng, Eddie Wang, Xin Du, Bruce Beutler, Woo-Kuen Lo, and Xiaohua Gong*
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: xgong{at}berkeley.edu)

Different mutations of {alpha}3 connexin (Cx46 or Gja8) and {alpha}8 connexin (Cx50 or Gja8), subunits of lens gap junction channels, cause a variety of cataracts via unknown mechanisms. We identified a dominant cataractous mouse line (L1), caused by a missense {alpha}8 connexin mutation that resulted in the expression of {alpha}8-S50P mutant proteins. Histology studies showed that primary lens fiber cells failed to fully elongate in heterozygous {alpha}8S50P/+ embryonic lenses, but not in homozygous {alpha}8S50P/S50P, {alpha}8-/- and {alpha}3-/- {alpha}8-/- mutant embryonic lenses. We hypothesized that {alpha}8-S50P mutant subunits interacted with wild-type {alpha}3 or {alpha}8, or with both subunits to affect fiber cell formation. We found that the combination of mutant {alpha}8-S50P and wild-type {alpha}8 subunits specifically inhibited the elongation of primary fiber cells, while the combination of {alpha}8-S50P and wild-type {alpha}3 subunits disrupted the formation of secondary fiber cells. Thus, this work provides the first in vivo evidence that distinct mechanisms, modulated by diverse gap junctions, control the formation of primary and secondary fiber cells during lens development. This explains why and how different connexin mutations lead to a variety of cataracts. The principle of this explanation can also be applied to mutations of other connexin isoforms that cause different diseases in other organs.




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