Publication | Closed Access
Influence of Age, Diabetes, and Cataract on Calcium, Lipid-Calcium, and Protein-Calcium Relationships in Human Lenses
89
Citations
62
References
2003
Year
The data support the hypothesis that increased intracellular calcium concentrations and a diminished capacity of lens lipids to bind to calcium initiate a cascade of events that culminates in increased light-scattering from lipids and especially proteins. Calcium binding to lipid membranes cannot directly contribute to light-scattering in cataractous lenses. It has been suggested that most of the diffusible calcium in the lens is in the intercellular spaces and that lens lipids in the outer leaflet of the bilayer bind to that calcium. If so, this could account for the 150-fold difference between free and bound calcium levels in the lens.
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