cristalinas
Cristalinas is a term used in Spanish-language ophthalmology and biology to refer to crystallin proteins of the vertebrate eye lens. Crystallins are the principal, water-soluble proteins that comprise the majority of lens protein content. They are essential for maintaining the lens’s transparency and its high refractive index, which enables proper focusing of light onto the retina. In English-language literature, crystallin is the standard term, but cristalinas is commonly used in Spanish texts.
There are three main crystallin families: alpha, beta, and gamma. Alpha-crystallins (CRYAA and CRYAB) act as molecular
Crystallins are encoded by multi-gene families and are expressed predominantly in lens fiber cells during development.
Crystallins are widely used as models for studying protein folding, stability, and aging in the lens, and