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    Exp Eye Res. 2009 Feb;88(2):241-7. Epub 2008 Jul 15.

    Presbyopia. Emerging from a blur towards an understanding of the molecular basis for this most common eye condition.

    Source

    Save Sight Institute, University of Sydney, NSW 2001, Australia. rjwt@uow.edu.au

    Abstract

    All people will be presbyopic by age 50, and we now understand something of the basis for this condition. It turns out to be a direct consequence of two features; first the design of the transparent lens and the way it must change shape to enable focussing by the human eye, and second the instability of proteins over a very long time period. The incremental changes that take place in the lens to render the central region inflexible by middle age and, as a consequence the person presbyopic, may also promote the subsequent development of cataract. Based on the most recent data, heat-induced denaturation of proteins in the lens appears to be a worthy topic for future investigation. Understanding such processes may allow us to glimpse the origin both of presbyopia and age-related nuclear cataract.

    PMID:
    18675268
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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