“…In contrast, if they are benign enough merely to increase susceptibility to environmental insults, including hyperglycemic and dietary (Weikel et al, 2014), ultraviolet light (Taylor et al, 1988), or oxidative (Brennan et al, 2012; Truscott, 2005) damage, they would tend to contribute to age related cataract (Hejtmancik and Smaoui, 2003; Shiels and Hejtmancik, 2007) by exacerbating the accumulation of damage seen to long lived lens proteins with aging (Truscott and Friedrich, 2016). Consistent with these proposed mechanisms, hereditary congenital cataracts are most often transmitted in a highly penetrant Mendelian fashion, and cataracts with a later origin, including progressive and age-related cataracts, are often multifactorial, with contributions from multiple genes providing from 35% to as much as 58% of the risk (McCarty and Taylor, 2001) as well as environmental insults.…”