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(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2003;44:5252-5258.)
© 2003 by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
doi:10.1167/iovs.03-0224

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Targeted Deletion of the Lens Fiber Cell–Specific Intermediate Filament Protein Filensin

Azita Alizadeh,1 John Clark,2 Teri Seeberger,2 John Hess,1 Tom Blankenship,1 and Paul G. FitzGerald1

1From the Department of Cell Biology and Human Anatomy, University of California, Davis, Davis, California; and the 2Department of Biological Structure, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.

PURPOSE. To determine the function of the lens fiber cell–specific cytoskeletal protein, filensin, in lens biology.

METHODS. Targeted genomic deletion was used to delete exon 1 and the transcriptional start site of the filensin gene. Resultant chimeric animals were bred to homozygosity for the mutant allele. These animals were outbred to mice bearing the wild-type CP49 alleles to eliminate the mutant CP49 gene carried by the 129 strain of mice. Animals homozygous for the mutated filensin gene and wild-type CP49 gene were compared with wild-type and heterozygous animals by Northern and Western blot analyses, light and electron microscopy, and slit lamp microscopy.

RESULTS. Disruption of the filensin gene successfully blocked production of filensin mRNA, reduced levels of filensin’s assembly partner CP49, and prevented the assembly of beaded filaments. Despite the absence of beaded filaments, lenses did not show obvious changes in fetal development, nor in the differentiation of epithelial cells into mature fiber cells, as judged by light microscopic analysis. Filensin knockouts began to show evidence of light-scattering by 2 months and worsened with age. Heterozygous animals exhibited an intermediate phenotype, showing a reduction in filensin transcript and moderate light-scattering at 5 months.

CONCLUSIONS. The lens fiber cell–specific intermediate filament protein filensin is essential for beaded filament assembly. However, although beaded filaments are not needed for normal lens fetal development or fiber cell differentiation, they appear to be necessary for the long-term maintenance of optical clarity. The mechanism by which the absence of filensin and the beaded filament affects optical clarity has yet to be defined.





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