Head M W, Peter A, Clayton R M
Institute of Cell, Animal and Population Biology, University of Edinburgh, UK.
Differentiation. 1991 Dec;48(3):147-56. doi: 10.1111/j.1432-0436.1991.tb00253.x.
The beta-crystallins are major water soluble proteins of vertebrate lens fibre cells and have previously been regarded as lens-specific proteins: however beta B2-and beta A3/A1-crystallin RNAs are transcribed and beta-crystallin polypeptides are detectable in the developing chick retina. The beta-crystallin RNA is transcribed in a subpopulation of retina cells and the number of transcribing cells and the level of beta-crystallin polypeptides increase during the differentiation of the retina. Several tissues express beta-crystallin polypeptides, but individual tissues are characterised by qualitative and quantitative differences in the beta- and delta-crystallin polypeptides expressed. The expression of beta-crystallins appears to be non-random as defined by tissue distribution, cellular localisation and ontogeny, implying a function for extralenticular beta-crystallins and a complex mechanism for the regulation of their expression.