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The effects of actomyosin disruptors on the mechanical integrity of the avian crystalline lens

Purpose: Actin and myosin within the crystalline lens maintain the structural integrity of lens fiber cells and form a hexagonal lattice cradling the posterior surface of the lens. The actomyosin network was pharmacologically disrupted to examine the effects on lenticular biomechanics and optical qu...

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Autores principales: Won, Gah-Jone, Fudge, Douglas S., Choh, Vivian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Vision 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4316703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25684975
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author Won, Gah-Jone
Fudge, Douglas S.
Choh, Vivian
author_facet Won, Gah-Jone
Fudge, Douglas S.
Choh, Vivian
author_sort Won, Gah-Jone
collection PubMed
description Purpose: Actin and myosin within the crystalline lens maintain the structural integrity of lens fiber cells and form a hexagonal lattice cradling the posterior surface of the lens. The actomyosin network was pharmacologically disrupted to examine the effects on lenticular biomechanics and optical quality. Methods: One lens of 7-day-old White Leghorn chickens was treated with 10 µM of a disruptor and the other with 0.01% dimethyl sulfoxide (vehicle). Actin, myosin, and myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) disruptors were used. The stiffness and the optical quality of the control and treated lenses were measured. Western blotting and confocal imaging were used to confirm that treatment led to a disruption of the actomyosin network. The times for the lenses to recover stiffness to match the control values were also measured. Results: Disruptor-treated lenses were significantly less stiff than their controls (p≤0.0274 for all disruptors). The disruptors led to changes in the relative protein amounts as well as the distributions of proteins within the lattice. However, the disruptors did not affect the clarity of the lenses (p≥0.4696 for all disruptors), nor did they affect spherical aberration (p = 0.02245). The effects of all three disruptors were reversible, with lenses recovering from treatment with actin, myosin, and MLCK disruptors after 4 h, 1 h, and 8 min, respectively. Conclusions: Cytoskeletal protein disruptors led to a decreased stiffness of the lens, and the effects were reversible. Optical quality was mostly unaffected, but the long-term consequences remain unclear. Our results raise the possibility that the mechanical properties of the avian lens may be actively regulated in vivo via adjustments to the actomyosin lattice.
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spelling pubmed-43167032015-02-13 The effects of actomyosin disruptors on the mechanical integrity of the avian crystalline lens Won, Gah-Jone Fudge, Douglas S. Choh, Vivian Mol Vis Research Article Purpose: Actin and myosin within the crystalline lens maintain the structural integrity of lens fiber cells and form a hexagonal lattice cradling the posterior surface of the lens. The actomyosin network was pharmacologically disrupted to examine the effects on lenticular biomechanics and optical quality. Methods: One lens of 7-day-old White Leghorn chickens was treated with 10 µM of a disruptor and the other with 0.01% dimethyl sulfoxide (vehicle). Actin, myosin, and myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) disruptors were used. The stiffness and the optical quality of the control and treated lenses were measured. Western blotting and confocal imaging were used to confirm that treatment led to a disruption of the actomyosin network. The times for the lenses to recover stiffness to match the control values were also measured. Results: Disruptor-treated lenses were significantly less stiff than their controls (p≤0.0274 for all disruptors). The disruptors led to changes in the relative protein amounts as well as the distributions of proteins within the lattice. However, the disruptors did not affect the clarity of the lenses (p≥0.4696 for all disruptors), nor did they affect spherical aberration (p = 0.02245). The effects of all three disruptors were reversible, with lenses recovering from treatment with actin, myosin, and MLCK disruptors after 4 h, 1 h, and 8 min, respectively. Conclusions: Cytoskeletal protein disruptors led to a decreased stiffness of the lens, and the effects were reversible. Optical quality was mostly unaffected, but the long-term consequences remain unclear. Our results raise the possibility that the mechanical properties of the avian lens may be actively regulated in vivo via adjustments to the actomyosin lattice. Molecular Vision 2015-01-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4316703/ /pubmed/25684975 Text en Copyright © 2015 Molecular Vision. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, used for non-commercial purposes, and is not altered or transformed.
spellingShingle Research Article
Won, Gah-Jone
Fudge, Douglas S.
Choh, Vivian
The effects of actomyosin disruptors on the mechanical integrity of the avian crystalline lens
title The effects of actomyosin disruptors on the mechanical integrity of the avian crystalline lens
title_full The effects of actomyosin disruptors on the mechanical integrity of the avian crystalline lens
title_fullStr The effects of actomyosin disruptors on the mechanical integrity of the avian crystalline lens
title_full_unstemmed The effects of actomyosin disruptors on the mechanical integrity of the avian crystalline lens
title_short The effects of actomyosin disruptors on the mechanical integrity of the avian crystalline lens
title_sort effects of actomyosin disruptors on the mechanical integrity of the avian crystalline lens
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4316703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25684975
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