| Literature DB >> 33833231 |
Xiangjia Zhu1,2,3, Yu Du4,5,6, Dan Li4,5,6, Jie Xu7,8,9, Qingfeng Wu10, Wenwen He4,5,6, Keke Zhang4,5,6, Jie Zhu9,11, Linying Guo12, Ming Qi13, Ailin Liu14, Jiao Qi4,5,6, Guangyu Wang8, Jiaqi Meng4,5,6, Zhenglin Yang15, Kang Zhang16,17,18, Yi Lu19,20,21.
Abstract
High myopia is a leading cause of blindness worldwide. Myopia progression may lead to pathological changes of lens and affect the outcome of lens surgery, but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Here, we find an increased lens size in highly myopic eyes associated with up-regulation of β/γ-crystallin expressions. Similar findings are replicated in two independent mouse models of high myopia. Mechanistic studies show that the transcription factor MAF plays an essential role in up-regulating β/γ-crystallins in high myopia, by direct activation of the crystallin gene promoters and by activation of TGF-β1-Smad signaling. Our results establish lens morphological and molecular changes as a characteristic feature of high myopia, and point to the dysregulation of the MAF-TGF-β1-crystallin axis as an underlying mechanism, providing an insight for therapeutic interventions.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33833231 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22041-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919