2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.exer.2013.10.015
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Ultrastructural analysis of the human lens fiber cell remodeling zone and the initiation of cellular compaction

Abstract: The purpose is to determine the nature of the cellular rearrangements occurring through the remodeling zone (RZ) in human donor lenses, identified previously by confocal microscopy to be about 100 µm from the capsule. Human donor lenses were fixed with 10% formalin followed by 4% paraformaldehyde prior to processing for transmission electron microscopy. Of 27 fixed lenses, ages 22, 55 and 92 years were examined in detail. Overview electron micrographs confirmed the loss of cellular organization present in the … Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(38 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
(55 reference statements)
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“…The cortex changes shape to accommodate while the lens nucleus does not. Normally, fiber cells undergo compaction in the IC and nucleus [34,35] to adjust the refractive index gradient to avoid spherical aberration while focusing [14,16]. Compaction, is probably achieved through dehydration which causes the fiber cells to become stiffer in a gradient-dependent manner, possibly due to gradual loss of water from the cytosol and extracellular spaces of IC fibers, and due to the absence of cytoskeletal proteins [14,16,33–36].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The cortex changes shape to accommodate while the lens nucleus does not. Normally, fiber cells undergo compaction in the IC and nucleus [34,35] to adjust the refractive index gradient to avoid spherical aberration while focusing [14,16]. Compaction, is probably achieved through dehydration which causes the fiber cells to become stiffer in a gradient-dependent manner, possibly due to gradual loss of water from the cytosol and extracellular spaces of IC fibers, and due to the absence of cytoskeletal proteins [14,16,33–36].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Compaction, is probably achieved through dehydration which causes the fiber cells to become stiffer in a gradient-dependent manner, possibly due to gradual loss of water from the cytosol and extracellular spaces of IC fibers, and due to the absence of cytoskeletal proteins [14,16,33–36]. In addition, CTCA is favored by the formation of large patches of AQP0 thin junctions [14,16,3537]. …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…7A but is less clear than C1a. This zone (C1b) is thought to represent a loss of transparency of the fibre cells that were previously in C1a (Michael and Bron, 2011) and has been shown subsequently, from microscopic analysis, to contain a high number of cell interface inter-digitations and irregularities that could contribute to scatter (Costello et al, 2013). This region, termed the remodelling zone (RZ), contains cells that are undergoing structural rearrangement and has been postulated to be a region in which fibre cell differentiation changes abruptly (Lim et al, 2009).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During fiber cell differentiation, the plasma membrane is extensively remodeled to form interlocking membrane domains between neighboring cells such as ball-and-sockets and protrusions (Bassnett, Shi et al 2011). These structures can appear as autophagosome-like double-membrane structures if they are cut perpendicular to the protrusion axis (Costello, Mohamed et al 2013). Thus, it is recommended that detection M A N U S C R I P T A C C E P T E D ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT of autophagy in the lens be performed in combination with other methods such as immunohistochemistry of autophagosome markers (e.g., LC3) using antibodies, the specificity of which should be confirmed in the lens using autophagy-deficient animals (Morishita, Eguchi et al 2013).…”
Section: Constitutive Autophagy In the Lensmentioning
confidence: 99%