Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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A comparative study of vertebrate eye lens crystallins using isoelectric focusing and densitometry.

1. The crystallin proteins of numerous species belonging to different classes of vertebrates have been studied. 2. Species-specific crystallin patterns are revealed which unequivocally characterize the different species. 3. A marked variability in the number and percentage of alpha-, beta- and gamma-crystallins were found in the various species. 4. The gamma-crystallin family, with a meagre number of common bands, has proved to be most representative of the species. The beta-crystallins, with their greater number of common bands, have been best preserved throughout vertebrate evolution. 5. From the similarity coefficient matrix a dendrogram is drawn up, a visual phylogenetic summary of the interrelationships between the vertebrates considered. 6. In the Discussion, other aspects are considered, such as lens morphology, functionality, animal age, post-synthetic modifications and genetic factors.

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