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1 mily of proteins that are also unique to the fiber cell.
2 ructure that has been found only in the lens fiber cell.
3 bilization of the myelin sheath and the lens fiber cell.
4 , packing, and membrane organization of lens fiber cells.
5 e organization of highly elongated hexagonal fiber cells.
6 sposal of unfolded/misfolded proteins in the fiber cells.
7 espectively, in both the lens epithelium and fiber cells.
8 etely at the tricellular junctions in mature fiber cells.
9 ting morphology that characterized wild-type fiber cells.
10 dnNCOA6 in postmitotic transgenic mouse lens fiber cells.
11 zed along the lateral and basal membranes of fiber cells.
12 emichannels in the nonjunctional membrane of fiber cells.
13 l permeable dyes should be measurable in the fiber cells.
14 fluorogenic calpain substrates into cortical fiber cells.
15  induced cell death in a group of transgenic fiber cells.
16 alpain 1, 2, 3, and 7 were expressed in lens fiber cells.
17 uclear Golgi streaks in differentiating lens fiber cells.
18 ity and solubility of the crystallins in the fiber cells.
19 cell genesis, particularly that of secondary fiber cells.
20 or lens mass and differentiated into primary fiber cells.
21 cell division and thus a decreased number of fiber cells.
22 in terminally differentiating secondary lens fiber cells.
23 taracts associated with disrupted inner lens fiber cells.
24 -localize at the plasma membrane in maturing fiber cells.
25 iate the formation of thin junctions between fiber cells.
26 hment of the unique cytoarchitecture of lens fiber cells.
27 fferent lens IF into the biology of the lens fiber cells.
28 icantly reduced secondary wall thickening in fiber cells.
29 increase in apoptosis of lens epithelial and fiber cells.
30 s system and by both E2f3a and E2f3b in lens fiber cells.
31 ed proteins characteristic of differentiated fiber cells.
32 ially as epithelial cells differentiate into fiber cells.
33 ent of ethylene in the development of cotton fiber cells.
34 srupt the denucleation process of inner lens fiber cells.
35 oreductase was inhibited in the central lens fiber cells.
36 f the acid nuclease activity in the cortical fiber cells.
37 egions: anterior epithelial, equatorial, and fiber cells.
38 eased connexins were observed in mutant lens fiber cells.
39  assembly pattern of ferritin chains in lens fiber cells.
40 veolin-1 and clathrin in lens epithelial and fiber cells.
41 ubunits disrupted the formation of secondary fiber cells.
42 on induced apoptosis of differentiating lens fiber cells.
43 ns epithelial cells and differentiating lens fiber cells.
44 pulsion of the lens nucleus and degenerating fiber cells.
45 ing differentiation of epithelial cells into fiber cells.
46 eposition of crystallin proteins in the lens fiber cells.
47  uniformly shaped and precisely aligned lens fiber cells.
48 ng into myofibroblasts or maturing into lens fiber cells.
49 dditionally greatly reduced carbon flux into fiber cells.
50  flux into vascular bundles versus that into fiber cells.
51  increased intercellular spaces between lens fiber cells.
52 ibit several features characteristic of lens fiber cells.
53 lso a component of adhaerens plaques in lens fiber cells.
54 nt for induction of Spry1 and -2 in the lens fiber cells.
55        The H-chain identified in cataractous fiber cells (29 kDa) differed from the 21-kDa standard c
56 hese hexagonally shaped differentiating lens fiber cells, a region devoid of actin; while beta-cateni
57 ong longitudinal actin cables, the short Li1 fiber cells accumulated disoriented transverse cables.
58  is a water-permeable channel, has a role in fiber cell adhesion, and is essential for fiber cell str
59  around embryonic day 16.5, primarily in the fiber cells adjacent to the organelle free zone.
60 bundance changes, which correlated with lens fiber cell age.
61 ns that undergo proteolytic degradation with fiber cell age; however, the specific sites of modificat
62                      The abnormal Snf2h(-/-) fiber cells also retain their nuclei.
63 oteome and phosphoproteome of the human lens fiber cell and provide a valuable reference for future r
64  structural specialization in the mouse lens fiber cell and to delineate its emergence relative to le
65 led irregular secondary cell wall margins in fiber cells and a lower xylan degree of polymerization.
66 long lateral borders of differentiating lens fiber cells and blocked their elongation.
67 ed oxygen led to the production of more lens fiber cells and larger lenses.
68 f the long-range stacking that characterizes fiber cells and that has been considered essential for c
69 fiber cells, swelling and disorganization of fiber cells, and defective fiber cell migration and elon
70                           Differentiation of fiber cells, and thus proper vision, is dependent on cro
71                                         Lens fiber cell architecture was examined by scanning electro
72                       Moreover, the walls of fiber cells are composed of thousands of fibers (or macr
73 thelial cells to differentiated primary lens fiber cells are poorly characterized.
74 t, and early differentiation of primary lens fiber cells are regulated by counterbalancing BMP and FG
75 Regular interlocking membrane protrusions on fiber cells are replaced by irregularly spaced and missh
76 m1 was present in epithelial and superficial fiber cells as a heavily glycosylated protein with an ap
77  also resulted in an increased proportion of fiber cells, as was found in Rbpj and Jag1 conditional m
78            As differentiation proceeds, lens fiber cells assemble actin into cortical filaments.
79          We compared RNA and DNA from cotton fiber cells at five developmental time points from early
80 etected in the lens epithelium and secondary fiber cells at postnatal day 1.
81 nd elasticity, is composed of a bulk mass of fiber cells attached to a sheet of lens epithelium.
82 nd equatorial samples were uncontaminated by fiber cells because they showed high expression of alpha
83  and are diminished in newly differentiating fiber cells, become widely distributed in the apical, la
84 n results in nuclear cataracts in which lens fiber cells begin to show variable degrees of degenerati
85 ers and a near total loss of F-actin in lens fiber cells but not epithelial cells.
86 erritin chains were not identified in canine fiber cells, but a small amount of fully assembled ferri
87  signaling regulates differentiation of lens fiber cells by maintaining a proliferating precursor poo
88  extracellular spaces between outer cortical fiber cells, (c) attenuated denucleation during confocal
89       However, in contrast to wild-type lens fiber cells, Cadm1-null fiber cells had an irregular, hi
90  of terminally differentiated, amitotic lens fiber cells capped on the anterior surface by a layer of
91 ed membrane-cytoskeleton structures of inner fiber cells, causing increased calcium influxes.
92            Expression of CBP in primary lens fiber cells coincides with alphaA-crystallin.
93  as E11.5, and aberrant DNA synthesis in the fiber cell compartment by E14.5.
94 nged though incomplete apoptosis in the lens fiber cell compartment that preserved nuclei in its cell
95 titioning of prospective lens epithelial and fiber cell compartments, lens fiber cell differentiation
96 generate elastic fibers and increase elastic fiber-cell connections in vivo.
97         Lens epithelial cells and early lens fiber cells contain the typical complement of intracellu
98 found uniquely localized to the younger lens fiber cell cortex region.
99 ysiological levels causes lens opacities and fiber cell defects, confirming the pathogenicity of this
100 on in cell wall lignification of extraxylary fiber cells demonstrates that extraxylary fibers undergo
101                              Failure of lens fiber cell denucleation (LFCD) is associated with congen
102 gest novel insights into the process of lens fiber cell denucleation and apoptosis.
103   Gene expression during the early stages of fiber cell development and in allopolyploid crops is poo
104 l gene regulation during the early stages of fiber cell development in cotton allopolyploids.
105                     In the absence of Epha2, fiber cells deviated from their normal course and termin
106 r example protein redistribution during lens fiber cell differentiation and aging.
107 ion of the hsf4 gene exhibit defects in lens fiber cell differentiation and early cataract formation.
108 lls constrict to form an anchor point before fiber cell differentiation and elongation at the equator
109 f the transgenes had adverse effects on lens fiber cell differentiation and eventually induced cell d
110 o processes essential for lens transparency--fiber cell differentiation and gap junction-mediated int
111 tch signaling controls the timing of primary fiber cell differentiation and is essential for secondar
112 r Notch signaling in progenitor cell growth, fiber cell differentiation and maintenance of the transi
113 ies have shown that Brg1 regulates both lens fiber cell differentiation and organized degradation of
114 rate a cell-autonomous role of Ncoa6 in lens fiber cell differentiation and suggest novel insights in
115 say system to identify pathways critical for fiber cell differentiation and to test therapies for the
116 o spatially and temporally distinct waves of fiber cell differentiation are crucial steps for normal
117 fect, linking MTOR signaling to induction of fiber cell differentiation by TGFbeta.
118 the vertebrate lens, FGF signaling regulates fiber cell differentiation characterized by high express
119 owed reduced growth; a wide spectrum of lens fiber cell differentiation defects, including reduced ex
120 thelial cell survival but is dispensable for fiber cell differentiation during lens development.
121 However, only Fgfr stimulation leads to lens fiber cell differentiation in the developing mammalian e
122 the alphaA-crystallin gene, a marker of lens fiber cell differentiation induced by FGF-signaling.
123                                         Lens fiber cell differentiation is marked by the onset of bet
124 aling is further required after the onset of fiber cell differentiation is not clear.
125                        Defects identified in fiber cell differentiation may explain the formation of
126 rganelles, suggesting that this component of fiber cell differentiation may not require ongoing trans
127 ial lens development and the early phases of fiber cell differentiation proceed in a manner largely i
128 riate activation of some aspects of the lens fiber cell differentiation program.
129 le of Notch2 and Jagged1 (Jag1) in secondary fiber cell differentiation using rat lens epithelial exp
130                                      Primary fiber cell differentiation was apparent at approximately
131                                              Fiber cell differentiation was disrupted in the PDGF-A a
132 rimary fiber cell differentiation, secondary fiber cell differentiation was not significantly affecte
133 epithelial and fiber cell compartments, lens fiber cell differentiation, and lens fiber cell nuclear
134 ens indicated that Cadm1 was degraded during fiber cell differentiation, at approximately the same ti
135 te that spectrin is cleaved in vivo, late in fiber cell differentiation, at or about the time that le
136 n of several proteins characteristic of lens fiber cell differentiation, including Prox1, p57(KIP2),
137 ructural specialization that emerges late in fiber cell differentiation, largely after the cell has l
138 ingly, although there was a delay in primary fiber cell differentiation, secondary fiber cell differe
139 ctions of the cellular actin cytoskeleton in fiber cell differentiation, the interaction of AQP0 and
140 ptosis, cell cycle withdrawal, and secondary fiber cell differentiation.
141 d Nf2 from the lens to determine its role in fiber cell differentiation.
142  proliferation and survival, as well as lens fiber cell differentiation.
143 ion of Ncoa6 also resulted in disrupted lens fiber cell differentiation.
144 direct role for Notch signaling in secondary fiber cell differentiation.
145 (E-cad), a cadherin switch characteristic of fiber cell differentiation.
146 an essential component of FGF-dependent lens fiber cell differentiation.
147 ition and cell migration but did not prevent fiber cell differentiation.
148 e lens epithelium and cell cycle exit during fiber cell differentiation.
149 fferentiation and is essential for secondary fiber cell differentiation.
150 s emergence relative to lens development and fiber cell differentiation.
151  removal of organelle components during lens fiber cell differentiation.
152 sis are adapted for removal of nuclei during fiber cell differentiation.
153 ased lens transparency and induction of lens fiber cell differentiation.
154 s placode invagination to E12.5 lens primary fiber cell differentiation.
155 on analysis was undertaken in epithelial and fiber cells dissected from clear human donor lenses.
156  to perform its roles in lens epithelial and fiber cells during development, whereas the Y118D mutati
157 ntrol the formation of primary and secondary fiber cells during lens development.
158 n ocular lens, there is no lipid turnover in fiber cells during the entire human lifespan.
159 y, eventual loss of the anterior epithelium, fiber cell dysgenesis, denucleation defects, and catarac
160                                              Fiber cells elongate, undergo organelle elimination, and
161                       These included lack of fiber cell elongation, abnormal proliferation in prospec
162 re/Rac1 cKO lenses displayed delayed primary fiber cell elongation, lenses from both Rac1 cKO strains
163 tion with actin cytoskeletal assembly during fiber cell elongation.
164                                   Those lens fiber cells entered an alternate proapoptotic pathway, a
165 riched in basolateral membranes, whereas, in fiber cells, expression was restricted to the lateral me
166   Histology studies showed that primary lens fiber cells failed to fully elongate in heterozygous alp
167 ial cell elongation and differentiation into fiber cells, followed by the symmetric and compact organ
168 ripts increased 200-fold in abundance during fiber cell formation, and DNase IIbeta activity accounte
169 3 or alpha8, or with both subunits to affect fiber cell formation.
170 ithelium and promoted the withdrawal of lens fiber cells from the cell cycle.
171 DS-PAGE analysis the composition of cortical fiber cells from wild-type and Lim2-null lenses appeared
172 rom mice and rats showed that the density of fiber cell gap junction channels was approximately the s
173 ](i) in HeLa cells transfected with the lens fiber cell gap junction protein sheep Cx44 also results
174 g, we show that Jagged1 is required for lens fiber cell genesis, particularly that of secondary fiber
175 st to wild-type lens fiber cells, Cadm1-null fiber cells had an irregular, highly undulating morpholo
176                                    Wild-type fiber cells had hexagonal cross-sectional profiles with
177 rphologic differentiation into epithelium or fiber cells had occurred at approximately 28 hpf.
178        At higher magnification, the walls of fiber cells have an interesting morphology-a distinctly
179 network, which functions to maintain regular fiber cell hexagonal morphology and packing geometry.
180 than normal lenses, revealing disruptions in fiber cell hexagonal packing, membrane skeleton and memb
181 tial fiber cell morphogenesis is normal, but fiber cell hexagonal shapes and packing geometry are not
182                        Canine and human lens fiber cell homogenate proteins were separated by one-dim
183 P49 were enriched by urea extraction of lens fiber cell homogenates after the water-soluble fraction
184                                         Lens fiber cell homogenates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE, and fe
185 ated from myoclonic epilepsy with ragged-red fiber cells if provided with sufficient ATP (2 mM).
186 NA binding protein that is expressed in lens fiber cells in distinct TDRD7-RGs that interact with STA
187 thelial cells and persist in differentiating fiber cells in Epha2(-/-) lenses.
188 ere detected primarily in the outer cortical fiber cells in lenses up to 29 years of age.
189                                         Lens fiber cells in mice lacking ephrin-A5 function appear ro
190 tributed in both the epithelium and cortical fiber cells in mouse lens.
191 ates with a transition zone in maturing lens fiber cells in which cytoskeleton is reorganized.
192 on of PI3K signaling in differentiating lens fiber cells induced apoptosis by blocking inactivation o
193                               The human lens fiber cell insoluble membrane fraction contains importan
194 ase activity, resulting in retention of lens fiber cell integrity following degradation of mitochondr
195         Cell-cell interactions organize lens fiber cells into highly ordered structures to maintain t
196                 Extensive elongation of lens fiber cells is a central feature of lens morphogenesis.
197                       In freshly dissociated fiber cells isolated from knockout Cx50 (KOCx50) mouse l
198 ue to Cx46 hemichannels, the authors studied fiber cells isolated from the lenses of double knockout
199 elated polymorphism of human and canine lens fiber cell L-chains and human H-chains.
200  analysis revealed that cortical Lim2(Gt/Gt) fiber cells lacked the undulating morphology that charac
201                                              Fiber cells lacking Nf2 did not fully exit the cell cycl
202 degradation and degeneration of inner mature fiber cells led to the dense nuclear cataract.
203                                         Many fiber cells lost their elongated morphology.
204  Human lens epithelial cell lysates and lens fiber cell lysates also catalyzed ubiquitination but onl
205 d was most likely contained initially within fiber cell lysosomes before release into the cytoplasm.
206 st-mitotic cells lack CDK1 and cyclins, lens fiber cells maintain these proteins.
207 FoxE3 and E-cadherin, despite expressing the fiber cell marker Prox1.
208 es disorganized and begins to upregulate the fiber cell markers beta- and gamma-crystallins, the tran
209 c three-dimensional architecture of the lens fiber cell mass.
210 f the membrane cytoskeleton that occurs with fiber cell maturation.
211                             However, as lens fiber cells mature they must destroy their organelles, i
212 s and packing geometry are not maintained as fiber cells mature.
213                                              Fiber cell membrane conductance was a factor of 2.7 time
214 e of this study was to characterize the lens fiber cell membrane proteome and phosphoproteome from hu
215 entified Cadm1 as a major constituent of the fiber cell membrane proteome.
216   Cadm1 is an abundant component of the lens fiber cell membrane.
217 d gammaTM regulation of F-actin stability on fiber cell membranes is critical for the long-range conn
218 udy the proteome and phosphoproteome of lens fiber cell membranes, respectively.
219 srupted distribution of beta2-spectrin along fiber cell membranes.
220 ilitating the transport of water across lens fiber cell membranes.
221 econd most abundant integral protein of lens fiber cell membranes.
222 es a potential role for this protein in lens fiber cell migration and adhesion.
223 isorganization of fiber cells, and defective fiber cell migration and elongation.
224 ture formation and capsule integrity, and in fiber cell migration, adhesion and survival, via regulat
225 hways in processes underlying morphogenesis, fiber cell migration, elongation and survival in the dev
226 erized by abnormal shape, impaired secondary fiber cell migration, sutural defects and thinning of th
227 tastatic UMUC-3 cells decreases actin stress fibers, cell migration, and metastasis, while Cav-1 over
228 n of an actin cytoskeleton that governs lens fiber cell morphogenesis in vivo.
229       In mouse lenses lacking Tmod1, initial fiber cell morphogenesis is normal, but fiber cell hexag
230 d ERM proteins may play an important role in fiber cell morphology, elongation, and organization.
231 almia, reduced pupillary openings, disrupted fiber cell morphology, eventual loss of the anterior epi
232                                         Lens fiber cell N-cadherin/beta-catenin/Rap1/Nectin-based cel
233  It is well established that vertebrate lens fiber cells normally express a modified intermediate fil
234  abundant membrane protein in mammalian lens fiber cells, not only serves as the primary water channe
235 s, lens fiber cell differentiation, and lens fiber cell nuclear degradation.
236                                    Sustained fiber cell nuclei and nuclear remnants scatter light, wh
237 ological analysis revealed retention of lens fiber cell nuclei owing to impeded terminal differentiat
238 essed at sites where differentiation of lens fiber cells occurs.
239 orphological abnormalities in lens secondary fiber cells of alphaA-/alphaB-crystallin gene double kno
240                                         Lens fiber cells of alphaA-R49C homozygous mice displayed an
241 Ferritin H- and L-chains in canine and human fiber cells of healthy lenses were extensively modified.
242 e the density of open Na(+)-leak channels in fiber cells of larger lenses.
243              The structures are not found in fiber cells of lenses younger than two weeks of age, nor
244  from the 12-kDa modified H-chain present in fiber cells of noncataractous lenses.
245 6C) and wild-type human alphaA-crystallin in fiber cells of the lens.
246                                Here, we used fiber cells of the vertebrate eye lens as a model system
247        BiP expression was upregulated in the fiber cells of transgenic mouse lenses expressing platel
248 r and transcript abundance in the elongating fiber cells of Upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.).
249  to undergo differentiation into either lens fiber cells or myofibroblasts.
250 icroscopic examination, (d) disrupted normal fiber cell organization and structure during scanning el
251            The human eye lens is composed of fiber cells packed with crystallins up to 450 mg/ml.
252                              Therefore, lens fiber cells, particularly from older lenses, may have li
253 ber cells undergo loss of the differentiated fiber cell phenotype and loss of the long-range stacking
254 red for the generation of the differentiated fiber cell phenotype but is required to maintain that di
255 zation of AQP0 with filensin and CP49 at the fiber cell plasma membrane in the lens cortex were defin
256 ost abundant integral protein (Lim2) of lens fiber cell plasma membranes.
257 fully, with only a handful of differentiated fiber cells present at birth.
258 , abnormal proliferation in prospective lens fiber cells, reduced expression of the cell cycle inhibi
259 ithelial cells to highly organized hexagonal fiber cells remains unknown.
260                                 Why the lens fiber cell requires two unique IF proteins and why and h
261                  Nuclear degradation in lens fiber cells requires the nuclease DNase IIbeta (DLAD) bu
262 ive disorganization and swelling of cortical fiber cells resembling the phenotype reported for altere
263 lens can induce ER or overall cell stress in fiber cells, resulting in the activation of UPR signalin
264 n filaments to the plasma membrane of muscle fiber cells (sarcolemma).
265 r tyrosine kinases, plays a key role in lens fiber cell shape and cell-cell interactions.
266 raction through which AQP0 may maintain lens fiber cell shape and organization.
267  a change that presumably adapts the IF to a fiber cell-specific function.
268               Phakosin and filensin are lens fiber cell-specific intermediate filament (IF) proteins.
269 dated alphaA-crystallin caused disruption of fiber cell structural integrity, protein aggregation, in
270 ens and is essential for establishing proper fiber cell structure and organization.
271 in fiber cell adhesion, and is essential for fiber cell structure and organization.
272 erity, comprising large vacuoles in cortical fiber cells, swelling and disorganization of fiber cells
273                 Nf2 is required for complete fiber cell terminal differentiation, maintenance of cell
274 paced, complex, lateral projections from the fiber cell that align themselves with similar structures
275                                              Fiber cells that arise later than 2 weeks of age undergo
276 ally characterize a small subpopulation of C-fiber cells that express high levels of TRPV1 (HE TRPV1
277 es younger than two weeks of age, nor in the fiber cells that initially differentiate before that tim
278 l of GSH diffusion from outer cells to inner fiber cells through gap junctions.
279 ibute to the organizational structure of the fiber cell tissue and microcirculation within it, as req
280 lular voltages varied from -45 mV in central fiber cells to -60 mV in surface cells.
281 ssure varied from 335 +/- 6 mm Hg in central fiber cells to 0 mm Hg in surface cells.
282  goes from approximately 340 mmHg in central fiber cells to 0 mmHg in surface cells.
283  concentrations varied from 17 mM in central fiber cells to 7 mM in surface cells, and intracellular
284 cate that glutathione diffuses from cortical fiber cells to the nucleus via gap junction channels for
285    In spite of the failure of all Acvr1(CKO) fiber cells to withdraw from the cell cycle, they expres
286          In the absence of external calcium, fiber cells took up both dyes.
287                                  In the lens fiber cell, two members of the IF family have evolved to
288         Subsequent to those stages, however, fiber cells undergo loss of the differentiated fiber cel
289  These results support a model in which lens fiber cells use integrin alpha5 to migrate along a Fn-co
290 f elastic moduli of lignocellulosic (bamboo) fiber cell walls with moisture content (MC).
291         The water-insoluble fraction of lens fiber cells was chemically cross-linked, and cross-linke
292 lulose deposition during secondary growth in fiber cells, was examined by live-cell imaging in cells
293  the PDGF-A and DN-Spry2 lenses, whereas the fiber cells were degenerating in the DN-FGFR lens.
294 roteins that were abundant in wild-type core fiber cells were diminished in the cores of Lim2(Gt/Gt)
295 lls and the cortical actin filaments in lens fiber cells were found to be necessary for cell survival
296                              Differentiating fiber cells were isolated from mouse lenses using collag
297                           PRV immunoreactive fibers/cells were not altered by neonatal MSG treatment
298 sed from 3 to 8-DPA in the developing cotton fiber cells while transcript levels remained low.
299 ifically inhibited the elongation of primary fiber cells, while the combination of alpha8-S50P and wi
300 , where they alternate with regularly spaced fiber cells whose branches contact all other cell types,
301 by the symmetric and compact organization of fiber cells within an enclosed extracellular matrix-enri

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