Heavy molecular weight (HMW) proteins were detected in normal and cataractous mouse lenses. The HMW aggregates increased with the age of the lens in normal mouse. Alpha and β-crystallins were detected by immunodiffusion in the HMW fractions from normal and Nakano mice. No γ-crystallin could be detected in these aggregates by immunodiffusion; however, a slight amount of this crystallin was detected using the radioimmunoassay. The polypeptide composition of the HMW proteins was different in the Nakano mouse from the normal. By SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, a polypeptide of 27 000 mol. wt. was evident in the Nakano HMW material that was not present in the normal HMW protein, but a 15 000 mol. wt. band was absent in the Nakano. Two other differences were seen with the Nakano lens. First, the water insoluble lens protein was extremely high. By 90 days, about two thirds of the protein was insoluble in these lenses. Secondly, the sharp drop in γ-crystallin at the time of complete opacification of the lens was in part a result of the leakage of this protein into the anterior chamber of these mice. By radioimmunoassay, the level of γ-crystallin in the Nakano aqueous humor at the time of the cataract was greater than 100 ng per microliter. These data demonstrate that crystallins are converted to the insoluble proteins and some diffuse out of the lens during cataract formation. © 1979.