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      Structural proteins of the mammalian lens: A review with emphasis on changes in development, aging and cataract

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      Experimental Eye Research
      Elsevier BV

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          Theory of transparency of the eye.

          The present work relates the turbidity of the eye to microscopic spatial fluctuations in its index of refraction. Such fluctuations are indicated in electron microscope photographs. By examining the superposition of phases of waves scattered from each point in the medium, we provide a mathematical demonstration of the Bragg reflection principle which we have recently used in the interpretation of experimental investigations: namely, that the scattering of light is produced only by those fluctuations whose fourier components have a wavelength equal to or larger than one half the wavelength of light in the medium. This consideration is applied first to the scattering of light from collagen fibers in the normal cornea. We demonstrate physically and quantitatively that a limited correlation in the position of near neighbor collagen fibers leads to corneal transparency. Next, the theory is extended to predict the turbidity of swollen, pathologic corneas, wherein the normal distribution of collagen fibers is disturbed by the presence of numerous lakes-regions where collagen is absent. A quantitative expression for the turbidity of the swollen cornea is given in terms of the size and density of such lakes. Finally, the theory is applied to the case of the cataractous lens. We assume that the cataracts are produced by aggregation of the normal lens proteins into an albuminoid fraction and provide a formula for the lens turbidity in terms of the molecular weight and index of refraction of the individual albuminoid macromolecules. We provide a crude estimate of the mean albuminoid molecular weight required for lens opacity.
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            Hydrolysis of Proteins

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              Free and protein-bound glutathione in normal and cataractous human lenses.

              Protein-bound glutathione was identified and measured in normal and cataractous human lenses. In a major group of cataracto us lenses the bound glutathione concentration was higher than normal. Study of normal lenses showed that their glutathione content is age-dependent, decreasing steadily from about 3.5mumol/g of lens at age 20 years to about 1.8mumol/g of lens at age 65 years. Cataract brings further decreases.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Experimental Eye Research
                Experimental Eye Research
                Elsevier BV
                00144835
                January 1976
                January 1976
                : 22
                : 1
                : 1-73
                Article
                10.1016/0014-4835(76)90033-6
                767125
                ba0b945d-d224-4eba-9809-2c1a672e88f9
                © 1976

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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