Concurrence of danish dementia and cataract: Insights from the interactions of dementia associated peptides with eye lens α-crystallin

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Abstract

Familial Danish Dementia (FDD) is an autosomal disease, which is distinguished by gradual loss of vision, deafness, progressive ataxia and dementia. Cataract is the first manifestation of the disease. In this article, we demonstrate a specific correlation between the poisoning of the chaperone activity of the rat eye lens α-crystallins, loss of lens transparency in organ culture by the pathogenic form of the Danish dementia peptide, i.e. the reduced Danish dementia peptide (redADan peptide), by a combination of ex vivo, in vitro, biophysical and biochemical techniques. The interaction of redADan peptide and lens crystallins are very specific when compared with another chaperone, HSP-70, underscoring the specificity of the pathogenic form of Danish dementia peptide, redADan, for the early onset of cataract in this disease. © 2008 Surolia et al.

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Surolia, I., Sinha, S., Sarkar, D. P., Reddy, P. Y., Reddy, G. B., & Surolia, A. (2008). Concurrence of danish dementia and cataract: Insights from the interactions of dementia associated peptides with eye lens α-crystallin. PLoS ONE, 3(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002927

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