Chemotactic activity of lens proteins and the pathogenesis of phacolytic glaucoma
J. T. Rosenbaum, J. R. Samples, B. Seymour, L. Langlois and L. David
Department of Medicine, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland 97201.
Leakage of lens proteins from a hypermature cataract can result in a
characteristic glaucoma that is associated with the invasion of the
anterior chamber by monocytes. We hypothesized that the lens proteins
themselves might account for the monocyte response. A sonicated lens
induced concentration-dependent migration of monocytes in a Boyden chamber
assay system. Checkerboard analysis indicated that the movement was
directed rather than merely random. Relative to a control chemoattractant,
N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine, the lens induced monocyte
migration more potently than neutrophil migration. The ability to induce
migration was markedly reduced by incubating the lens with either trypsin
or papain. Chemotactic activity was readily demonstrable in lenses from
young donors without cataracts. Separation of lens proteins by gel
filtration with high-performance liquid chromatography indicated that the
chemotactic activity was most consistently associated with the gamma
crystallin fraction. The chemotactic activity of lens proteins may
contribute to the pathogenesis of phacolytic glaucoma or the uveitis
resulting from retained cortical material after cataract extraction.