Ontribute toward decreasing protein stability, partly by impairing the chaperone function of acrystallins, the Ergocalciferol site levels of which decrease with age due to insolubilization [6]. Overall, the aging human lens is constantly exposed to chemical and physical stresses. However, while oxidative damage is subdued during normal aging, it is a major cause or consequence of nuclear cataracts, the most common types of age-related cataracts, whereby the loss of glutathione (GSH) and formation of disulfides are considered to be the key factors in oxidative stress and nuclear cataractogenesis [7]. To protect from oxidation the lens has evolved as an anaerobic system with millimolar concentrations of both glutathione (GSH) and ascorbic acid. However, both protective systems are impaired during aging whereby GSH level significantly 25033180 declines in the lens nucleus [8,9]. This is in part attributed to lowered c-glutamylcysteine ligase (Gcl) activity [10] and a barrier to GSH diffusion toward the nucleus [9]. As a result ascorbic acid is increasingly oxidized throughout life leading to accelerated accumulation of crystallin-bound advanced glycation end products (AGEs) that contribute to cataractogenesis [11,12,13]. Concomitantly, increased protein residue oxidation is observed, as reflected by the formation of methionine sulfoxide, protein disulfides, kynurenine, and o-tyrosine from methionine, cysteine, tryptophan and phenylalanine, respectively [13,14,15]. In spite of considerable progress in the field, it has been extraordinarily difficult to study the relationship between theAge-Related Nuclear Cataract Animal Modelprotein modifications and carbonyl stress or oxidant stress due to lack of appropriate animal models. One recent model of carbonyl stress developed by us successfully mimics the carbonyl stress component of the aging lens [12]. However, while several models illustrate the role of glutathione for sulfhydryl homeostasis, its role for lens transparency during aging has not been unequivocally established. Indeed most chemically or genetic induced models of disrupted GSH homeostasis only produced opacity in pups or very young animals, with uncertainties as to whether the MedChemExpress Docosahexaenoyl ethanolamide observed lenticular changes were due to developmental abnormalities or chemical toxicity via pathways unrelated to oxidation itself. For this reason, we set out to genetically lower lenticular glutathione levels specifically in the lens (since the systemic knockout is lethal [16]) by disrupting the catalytic subunit of c-glutamyl- cysteine ligase (Gclc) using a conditional Cre/LoxP approach. The predicted slow decline in glutathione levels using this approach is hypothesized to mimic the processes underlying the oxidative arm of human ARNC. Below we present the genetic, biochemical and biological phenotypes of resulting from the loss of Gclc function in the lens of the Lens Glutathione Synthesis KnockOut (LEGSKO) mouse.protein expression (Fig. 1B). The most intriguing finding was that HET-LEGSKO mice lenses maintained quasi-normal GSH level (reduced ,10 ), while HOM-LEGSKO GSH levels were more than 60 reduced compared to wild type lenses at 3months of age (Fig.1D). These results indicate that compensatory mechanisms might be involved in lens GSH homeostasis, most likely via transporter(s) systems as suggested by others [18]. Moreover, analysis of cortical and nuclear GSH content in the HOMLEGSKO lenses at 5 months of age (Table 1) revealed a GSH gradient from cortex to nucleus, with o.Ontribute toward decreasing protein stability, partly by impairing the chaperone function of acrystallins, the levels of which decrease with age due to insolubilization [6]. Overall, the aging human lens is constantly exposed to chemical and physical stresses. However, while oxidative damage is subdued during normal aging, it is a major cause or consequence of nuclear cataracts, the most common types of age-related cataracts, whereby the loss of glutathione (GSH) and formation of disulfides are considered to be the key factors in oxidative stress and nuclear cataractogenesis [7]. To protect from oxidation the lens has evolved as an anaerobic system with millimolar concentrations of both glutathione (GSH) and ascorbic acid. However, both protective systems are impaired during aging whereby GSH level significantly 25033180 declines in the lens nucleus [8,9]. This is in part attributed to lowered c-glutamylcysteine ligase (Gcl) activity [10] and a barrier to GSH diffusion toward the nucleus [9]. As a result ascorbic acid is increasingly oxidized throughout life leading to accelerated accumulation of crystallin-bound advanced glycation end products (AGEs) that contribute to cataractogenesis [11,12,13]. Concomitantly, increased protein residue oxidation is observed, as reflected by the formation of methionine sulfoxide, protein disulfides, kynurenine, and o-tyrosine from methionine, cysteine, tryptophan and phenylalanine, respectively [13,14,15]. In spite of considerable progress in the field, it has been extraordinarily difficult to study the relationship between theAge-Related Nuclear Cataract Animal Modelprotein modifications and carbonyl stress or oxidant stress due to lack of appropriate animal models. One recent model of carbonyl stress developed by us successfully mimics the carbonyl stress component of the aging lens [12]. However, while several models illustrate the role of glutathione for sulfhydryl homeostasis, its role for lens transparency during aging has not been unequivocally established. Indeed most chemically or genetic induced models of disrupted GSH homeostasis only produced opacity in pups or very young animals, with uncertainties as to whether the observed lenticular changes were due to developmental abnormalities or chemical toxicity via pathways unrelated to oxidation itself. For this reason, we set out to genetically lower lenticular glutathione levels specifically in the lens (since the systemic knockout is lethal [16]) by disrupting the catalytic subunit of c-glutamyl- cysteine ligase (Gclc) using a conditional Cre/LoxP approach. The predicted slow decline in glutathione levels using this approach is hypothesized to mimic the processes underlying the oxidative arm of human ARNC. Below we present the genetic, biochemical and biological phenotypes of resulting from the loss of Gclc function in the lens of the Lens Glutathione Synthesis KnockOut (LEGSKO) mouse.protein expression (Fig. 1B). The most intriguing finding was that HET-LEGSKO mice lenses maintained quasi-normal GSH level (reduced ,10 ), while HOM-LEGSKO GSH levels were more than 60 reduced compared to wild type lenses at 3months of age (Fig.1D). These results indicate that compensatory mechanisms might be involved in lens GSH homeostasis, most likely via transporter(s) systems as suggested by others [18]. Moreover, analysis of cortical and nuclear GSH content in the HOMLEGSKO lenses at 5 months of age (Table 1) revealed a GSH gradient from cortex to nucleus, with o.
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