Light-focusing human micro-lenses generated from pluripotent stem cells model lens development and drug-induced cataract in vitro

Author:

Murphy Patricia12,Kabir Md Humayun123,Srivastava Tarini12,Mason Michele E.12,Dewi Chitra U.12,Lim Seakcheng12,Yang Andrian34,Djordjevic Djordje34,Killingsworth Murray C.5,Ho Joshua W. K.34,Harman David G.12,O'Connor Michael D.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine, Western Sydney University, Campbelltown, NSW 2560, Australia

2. Medical Sciences Research Group, Western Sydney University, Campbelltown, NSW 2560, Australia

3. Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute, Darlinghurst, NSW 2010, Australia

4. St Vincent's Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2010, Australia

5. Electron Microscopy Laboratory, NSW Health Pathology and Correlative Microscopy Facility, Ingham Institute, Liverpool, NSW 2170, Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACT Cataracts cause vision loss and blindness by impairing the ability of the ocular lens to focus light onto the retina. Various cataract risk factors have been identified, including drug treatments, age, smoking and diabetes. However, the molecular events responsible for these different forms of cataract are ill-defined, and the advent of modern cataract surgery in the 1960s virtually eliminated access to human lenses for research. Here, we demonstrate large-scale production of light-focusing human micro-lenses from spheroidal masses of human lens epithelial cells purified from differentiating pluripotent stem cells. The purified lens cells and micro-lenses display similar morphology, cellular arrangement, mRNA expression and protein expression to human lens cells and lenses. Exposing the micro-lenses to the emergent cystic fibrosis drug Vx-770 reduces micro-lens transparency and focusing ability. These human micro-lenses provide a powerful and large-scale platform for defining molecular disease mechanisms caused by cataract risk factors, for anti-cataract drug screening and for clinically relevant toxicity assays.

Funder

Medical Advances Without Animals Trust

Rebecca L. Cooper Medical Research Foundation

National Health and Medical Research Council

National Heart Foundation of Australia

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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