The P23T mutant of human â„D-crystallin (HGD) is associated with cataract. We have previously investigated the solution properties of this mutant, as well as those of the closely related P23V and P23S mutants, and shown that although mutations at site 23 of HGD do not produce a significant structural change in the protein, they nevertheless profoundly alter the solubility of the protein. Remarkably, the solubility of the mutants decreases with increasing temperature, in sharp contrast to the behavior of the native protein. This inverted solubility corresponds to a strong increase in the binding energy with temperature. Here we have investigated the liquid-liquid coexistence curve and the diffusivity of the P23V mutant and find that these solution properties are unaffected by the mutation. This means that the chemical potentials in the solution phase are essentially unaltered. The apparent discrepancy between the interaction energies in the solution phase, as compared with the solid phase, is explicable in terms of highly anisotropic interprotein interactions, which are averaged out in the solution phase but are fully engaged in the solid phase.cataract Í lens Í protein phase diagram Í quasielastic light scattering H uman â„D-crystallin (HGD) is an important member of the â„-crystallin family of proteins found in the human lens. Mutations in HGD in particular have been associated with a number of childhood cataracts (1-4). Recently, the P23T mutant of HGD has been associated with coralliform, cerulean, and fasciculiform cataract phenotypes (refs. 1 and 2 and references therein). Mutation at site 23 of HGD is only one of a number of single point mutations, including the R14C, R58H, and R36S mutations, that occur on the CRGD gene and that have been linked with early-onset cataract disease (5-9). Physicochemical characterization of the mutant proteins shows why these changes result in the formation of either covalently linked aggregates in the case of R14C (5, 6) or crystals in the case of the R58H and R36S mutants (7-9). The P23T mutation results in decreased solubility of the protein, leading to protein aggregation and light scattering, and hence to lens opacity. However, the aggregates are not covalently linked, since the aggregation process is completely reversible with temperature.Formation of protein aggregates is a common motif in many ''condensation diseases,'' which include cataract (10), sickle-cell anemia (11,12), and Alzheimer's disease (13,14), as well as other amyloid diseases such as diabetes and Parkinson's disease (15,16). These examples highlight the importance of understanding the processes that lead to the formation of condensed protein phases under physiological conditions. In particular, protein condensation diseases resulting from a single amino acid substitution provide favorable conditions for biophysical analysis because such substitutions produce a change in the interaction potential between the proteins but may not necessarily result in significant structural changes to the protein itself. T...