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April 21 - Researchers Find Clue to
Cataract Formation
It is the No. 1 line item cost of Medicare reimbursement
and affects more than 20 million people in the United States.
Cataracts, which can have devastating effects on the eye,
affect 42% of the population between the ages of 70 and 80,
and 68% of the population over the age of 80, according to
the National Eye Institute. Now, a University of Missouri
professor has identified an important step in how cataracts
form. This discovery, published in a recent edition of The
Journal of Biological Chemistry,
could lead to a better treatment or cure for cataracts in
the future.
In his study, Krishna K. Sharma, PhD, a professor of ophthalmology,
found that a specific type of protein begins to lose function
as the eye ages. As the protein loses function, small peptides
made of 10 to 15 amino acids start forming and accelerate
cataract formation in the eye.
"It is very helpful to track the formation of these
peptides," Sharma says. "The next step is to work
on preventing their formation. If we are successful, we could
delay the aging process in the eye. A 10-year delay in the
onset of cataracts could decrease the number of cataract surgeries
by 45%, thus significantly decreasing vision care cost. Currently,
1.5 million to 2 million cataract surgeries are completed
yearly."
About 50% of the lens is made of proteins, and 90% of the
proteins are structures known as crystallins. One
of the main functions of the crystallins is to maintain the
clarity of the lens through an activity known as chaperoning.
In a healthy eye, crystallins break down over time, eventually
degrading to small peptides. The peptides are then cleared
from the eye with the help of other proteins.
As the eye ages, small peptides start to form at an increasing
rate. As the number of small peptides increases in the eye,
chaperone activity starts to decrease, resulting in less cleansing
activity inside the lens. As the small peptides increase,
the eye's lens starts to develop cataracts. There are a variety
of causes that lead to the decrease of chaperone activity,
and the presence of these small peptides accelerates the process,
Sharma says.
"It's a very sad situation because cataracts can have
a huge impact on the quality of a person's life," Sharma
says. "People lose the ability to appreciate visual art
and have to learn a new set of skills to navigate. This study
will bring us another step closer to understanding how cataracts
form in the eye and how best to treat this debilitating disease."
Approximately 50% of cataract formation in older individuals
is age related, but other risk factors include genetics, smoking,
exposure to UV light, and diabetes. According to the National
Eye Institute, symptoms of early cataracts may be improved
with new eyeglasses, brighter lighting, antiglare sunglasses,
or magnifying lenses. If these measures do not help, surgery
is the only effective treatment. Surgery involves removing
the cloudy lens and replacing it with an artificial lens.
Source: Christian Basi, University of
Missouri-Columbia
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