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1.
Rat lenses in organ culture were exposed to activated species of oxygen generated in the culture medium either by xanthine oxidase and hypoxanthine or by riboflavin and visible light, two systems which have been shown to produce superoxide and H2O2. In each case there was marked damage to carrier-mediated transport systems of the lens. Under standard culture conditions this damage was strongly inhibited by catalase, but not by superoxide dismutase (SOD). By the addition to the medium of chelated iron, hydroxyl radicals were produced in a Fenton reaction with a concomitant decrease in H2O2 levels. With both oxygen radical-generating systems, the addition of chelated iron strongly inhibited lens damage. This inhibitory effect could be reversed by the addition of SOD with the chelated iron. Under such conditions SOD converts superoxide anion to H2O2, thereby preventing reduction of the chelated iron and thus stopping the generation of hydroxyl radicals. Increased lens damage following addition of SOD to the iron-containing systems correlated with higher H2O2 concentrations, and was inhibited by catalase. These findings suggest that, when generated in the fluids surrounding the lens, H2O2 poses a much greater oxidative stress for the lens than do the superoxide or hydroxyl free radicals.  相似文献   

2.
1. The ability of cell-free preparations from bovine lens to degrade fragments of alpha-crystallin has been studied. Crystallin fragments, produced by either chemical cleavage with cyanogen bromide or prolonged treatment with H2O2 and Cu2+ to produce hydroxyl radicals, were labelled with 125I and incubated with preparations obtained from lenses from animals of different age. 2. Results showed that the ability of the preparations obtained from the lens cores (the innermost part of the lens composed of enucleated non-dividing cells incapable of protein synthesis) to degrade crystallin fragments decreased with animal age. No such age-related correlation was obtained with preparations obtained from the cortex (the outer region of the lens surrounding the core). 3. The effect of incubation of the various lenticular preparations with H2O2 and Cu2+ on subsequent ability to catabolise crystallin fragments was also examined. Preparations from the oldest lenses were found to be the least resistant to free-radical attack. 4. The relative susceptibility of the crystallins and non-lenticular proteins to H2O2/Cu(2+)-mediated free-radical attack was examined. Not only were the various crystallins (alpha, beta and gamma) far more resistant to cleavage under these conditions, they also protected the non-lenticular proteins from free-radical-mediated attack. The comparative resistance of the crystallins to attack and their ability to protect other proteins appeared to be dependent on their structural integrity as prior denaturation with acid and/or cleavage with cyanogen bromide eliminated these properties. 5. It is suggested that crystallins (which show sequence homology to some heat-shock proteins) possess homeostatic functions which could protect other proteins (e.g. proteases) from certain forms of free-radical-mediated damage; crystallins may therefore be important in ageing in general where aberrant polypeptides accumulate.  相似文献   

3.
The refracton hypothesis describes the lens and cornea together as a functional unit that provides the proper ocular transparent and refractive properties for the basis of normal vision. Similarities between the lens and corneal crystallins also suggest that both elements of the refracton may also contribute to the antioxidant defenses of the entire eye. The cornea is the primary physical barrier against environmental assault to the eye and functions as a dominant filter of UV radiation. It is routinely exposed to reactive oxygen species (ROS)-generating UV light and molecular O(2) making it a target vulnerable to UV-induced damage. The cornea is equipped with several defensive mechanisms to counteract the deleterious effects of UV-induced oxidative damage. These comprise both non-enzymatic elements that include proteins and low molecular weight compounds (ferritin, glutathione, NAD(P)H, ascorbate and alpha-tocopherol) as well as various enzymes (catalase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase, and superoxide dismutase). Several proteins accumulate in the cornea at unusually high concentrations and have been classified as corneal crystallins based on the analogy of these proteins with the abundant taxon-specific lens crystallins. In addition to performing a structural role related to ocular transparency, corneal crystallins may also contribute to the corneal antioxidant systems through a variety of mechanisms including the direct scavenging of free radicals, the production of NAD(P)H, the metabolism and/or detoxification of toxic compounds (i.e. reactive aldehydes), and the direct absorption of UV radiation. In this review, we extend the discussion of the antioxidant defenses of the cornea to include these highly expressed corneal crystallins and address their specific capacities to minimize oxidative damage.  相似文献   

4.
Over 95% of the dry mass of the eye lens consists of specialized proteins called crystallins. Aged lenses are subject to cataract formation, in which damage, cross-linking, and precipitation of crystallins contribute to a loss of lens clarity. Cataract is one of the major causes of blindness, and it is estimated that over 50,000,000 people suffer from this disability. Damage to lens crystallins appears to be largely attributable to the effects of UV radiation and/or various active oxygen species (oxygen radicals, 1O2, H2O2, etc.). Photooxidative damage to lens crystallins is normally retarded by a series of antioxidant enzymes and compounds. Crystallins which experience mild oxidative damage are rapidly degraded by a system of lenticular proteases. However, extensive oxidation and cross-linking severely decrease proteolytic susceptibility of lens crystallins. Thus, in the young lens the combination of antioxidants and proteases serves to prevent crystallin damage and precipitation in cataract formation. The aged lens, however, exhibits diminished antioxidant capacity and decreased proteolytic capabilities. The loss of proteolytic activity may actually be partially attributable to oxidative damage which proteases (like any other protein)_can sustain. We propose that the rate of crystallin damage increases as antioxidant capacity declines with age. The lower protease activity of aged lens cells may be insufficient to cope with such rates of crystallin damage, and denatured crystallins may begin to accumulate. As the concentration of oxidatively denatured crystallins rises, cross-linking reactions may produce insoluble aggregates which are refractive to protease digestion. Such a scheme could explain many events which are known to contribute to cataract formation, as well as several which have appeared to be unrelated. This hypothesis is also open to experimental verification and intervention.  相似文献   

5.
The primary function of the eye lens is to focus light on the retina. The major proteins in the lens—α, β, and γ-crystallins—are constantly subjected to age-related changes such as oxidation, deamidation, truncation, glycation, and methylation. Such age-related modifications are cumulative and affect crystallin structure and function. With time, the modified crystallins aggregate, causing the lens to increasingly scatter light on the retina instead of focusing light on it and causing the lens to lose its transparency gradually and become opaque. Age-related lens opacity, or cataract, is the major cause of blindness worldwide. We review deamidation, and glycation that occur in the lenses during aging keeping in mind the structural and functional changes that these modifications bring about in the proteins. In addition, we review proteolysis and discuss recent observations on how crystallin fragments generated in vivo, through their anti-chaperone activity may cause crystallin aggregation in aging lenses. We also review hyperbaric oxygen treatment induced guinea pig and ‘humanized’ ascorbate transporting mouse models as suitable options for studies on age-related changes in lens proteins.  相似文献   

6.
The eye lens crystallins of the octopus Octopus dofleini were identified by sequencing abundant proteins and cDNAs. As in squid, the octopus crystallins have subunit molecular masses of 25-30 kDa, are related to mammalian glutathione S-transferases (GST), and are encoded in at least six genes. The coding regions and deduced amino acid sequences of four octopus lens cDNAs are 75-80% identical, while their non-coding regions are entirely different. Deduced amino acid sequences show 52-57% similarity with squid GST-like crystallins, but only 20-25% similarity with mammalian GST. These data suggest that the octopus and squid lens GST-like crystallin gene families expanded after divergence of these species. Northern blot hybridization indicated that the four octopus GST-like crystallin genes examined are lens-specific. Lens extracts showed about 40 times less GST activity using 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene as substrate than liver extracts of the octopus, indicating that the major GST-like crystallins are specialized for a lens structural role. A prominent 59-kDa crystallin polypeptide, previously observed in octopus but not squid and called omega-crystallin (Chiou, S.-H. (1988) FEBS Lett. 241, 261-264), has been identified as an aldehyde dehydrogenase. Since cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase is a major protein in elephant shrew lenses (eta-crystallin; Wistow, G., and Kim, H. (1991) J. Mol. Evol. 32, 262-269) the octopus aldehyde dehydrogenase crystallin provides the first example of a similar enzyme-crystallin in vertebrates and invertebrates. The use of detoxification stress proteins (GST and aldehyde dehydrogenase) as cephalopod crystallins indicates a common strategy for recruitment of enzyme-crystallins during the convergent evolution of vertebrate and invertebrate lenses. For historical reasons we propose that the octopus GST-like crystallins, like those of the squid, are called S-crystallins.  相似文献   

7.
The alpha-, beta-, and gamma-crystallins are the major structural proteins of mammalian lenses. The human lens also contains tryptophan-derived UV filters, which are known to spontaneously deaminate at physiological pH and covalently attach to lens proteins. 3-Hydroxykynurenine (3OHKyn) is the third most abundant of the kynurenine UV filters in the lens, and previous studies have shown this compound to be unstable and to be oxidized under physiological conditions, producing H2O2. In this study, we show that methionine and tryptophan amino acid residues are oxidized when bovine alpha-crystallin is incubated with 3-hydroxykynurenine. We observed almost complete oxidation of methionines 1 and 138 in alphaA-crystallin and a similar extent of oxidation of methionines 1 and 68 in alphaB-crystallin after 48 h. Tryptophans 9 and 60 in alphaB-crystallin were oxidized to a lesser extent. AlphaA-crystallin was also found to have 3OHKyn bound to its single cysteine residue. Examination of normal aged human lenses revealed no evidence of oxidation of alpha-crystallin; however, oxidation was detected at methionine 1 in both alphaA- and alphaB-crystallin from human cataractous lenses. Age-related nuclear cataract is associated with coloration and insolubilization of lens proteins and extensive oxidation of cysteine and methionine residues. Our findings demonstrate that 3-hydroxykynurenine can readily catalyze the oxidation of methionine residues in both alphaB- and alphaA-crystallin, and it has been reported that alpha-crystallin modified in this way is a poorer chaperone. Thus, 3-hydroxykynurenine promotes the oxidation and modification of crystallins and may contribute to oxidative stress in the human lens.  相似文献   

8.
1. The four crystallins of the gray squirrel lens have been characterized using gel filtration chromatography, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and immunoblotting. Alpha, beta-heavy, beta-light, and gamma crystallins of squirrel lenses have been identified immunologically, and they cross-react strongly with rabbit polyclonal antibodies. The gamma-24 crystallin of the squirrel lens also reacts strongly with monoclonal anti-human lens gamma-24, as shown by its inhibition of the ELISA reaction by 85%. 2. The water-insoluble urea soluble proteins represent non-covalently associated species of soluble crystallins and the lens cytoskeletal proteins. The membrane intrinsic protein in the urea insoluble pellet has a mol. wt of 27,000 but other lower and higher mol. wt components are also present, which were removed by washing with 0.1 NaOH. The N-terminal 30 amino acid of squirrel lens gamma crystallin was found to be identical to that of the bovine (and human) lens. 3. Measurements of the distribution and state of SH and SS compounds in the squirrel lens have shown greater similarities to those of primates than those of rodents. The findings show that on the basis of both protein and sulfur chemistry the squirrel lens is a representative model for studies of oxidative lens changes in diurnal animals, including man.  相似文献   

9.
The reducing environment in the eye lens diminishes with age, leading to significant oxidative stress. Oxidation of lens crystallin proteins is the major contributor to their destabilization and deleterious aggregation that scatters visible light, obscures vision, and ultimately leads to cataract. However, the molecular basis for oxidation-induced aggregation is unknown. Using X-ray crystallography and small-angle X-ray scattering, we describe the structure of a disulfide-linked dimer of human γS-crystallin that was obtained via oxidation of C24. The γS-crystallin dimer is stable at glutathione concentrations comparable to those in aged and cataractous lenses. Moreover, dimerization of γS-crystallin significantly increases the protein’s propensity to form large insoluble aggregates owing to non-cooperative domain unfolding, as is observed in crystallin variants associated with early-onset cataract. These findings provide insight into how oxidative modification of crystallins contributes to cataract and imply that early-onset and age-related forms of the disease share comparable development pathways.  相似文献   

10.
The exposure of dialyzed preparations of lens crystallins to copper (II) ions causes a decrease in protein surface thiol and the production of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). H2O2 production by gamma and beta crystallin subfractions (which contain the greatest level of thiol) is the predominant source of this H2O2. Protein surface thiols are probable sources of H2O2 formation since N-ethyl maleimide treatment of lens proteins and zinc ions inhibit H2O2 production. These data are consistent with a hypothesis that transition metal-catalyzed oxidation of protein contributes to cataractogenic lens protein oxidations.  相似文献   

11.
Protein distribution patterns across eye lenses from the Asiatic toad Bufo gargarizans were investigated and individual crystallin classes characterised. Special fractionation that follows the growth mode of the lens was used to yield nine fractions corresponding to layers laid down at different chronological (developmental) stages. Proportions of soluble and insoluble crystallins within each fraction were measured by Bradford assay. Water‐soluble proteins in all fractions were separated by size‐exclusion HPLC and constituents of each class further characterised by electrophoresis, RP‐HPLC and MS analysis. In outer lens layers, α‐crystallin is the most abundant soluble protein but is not found in soluble proteins in the lens centre. Water‐soluble β‐crystallins also decrease from their highest level in the outer lens to negligible mounts in the central lens. The proportion of soluble γ‐crystallin increases significantly towards the lens centre where this is the only soluble protein present. Insoluble protein levels increase significantly towards the lens centre. In B. gargarizans lenses, as with other anurans, the predominant water‐soluble protein class is γ‐crystallin. No taxon‐specific crystallins were found. The relationship between the protein distribution patterns and the functional properties of the lens this species is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Keenan J  Manning G  Elia G  Dunn MJ  Orr DF  Pierscionek BK 《Proteomics》2012,12(11):1830-1843
The eye lens remains transparent because of soluble lens proteins known as crystallins. For years γ-crystallins have been known as the main lens proteins in lower vertebrates such as fish and amphibians. The unique growth features of the lens render it an ideal structure to study ageing; few studies have examined such changes in anuran lenses. This study aimed to investigate protein distribution patterns in Litoria infrafrenata and Phyllomedusa sauvagei species. Lenses were fractionated into concentric layers by controlled dissolution. Water-soluble proteins were separated into high (HMW), middle (MMW) and low molecular weight (LMW) fractions by size-exclusion HPLC and constituents of each protein class revealed by 1DE and 2DE. Spots were selected from 2DE gels on the basis of known ranges of subunit molecular weights and pH ranges and were identified by MALDI-TOF/TOF MS following trypsin digestion. Comparable lens distribution patterns were found for each species studied. Common crystallins were detected in both species; the most prominent of these was γ-crystallin. Towards the lens centre, there was a decrease in α- and β-crystallin proportions and an increase in γ-crystallins. Subunits representing taxon-specific crystallins demonstrating strong sequence homology with ζ-crystallin/quinone oxidoreductase were found in both L. infrafrenata and P. sauvagei lenses. Further work is needed to determine which amphibians have taxon-specific crystallins, their evolutionary origins, and their function.  相似文献   

13.
X-ray diffraction method has been applied for comparative investigation of native structure of eye lens proteins (crystallins). X-ray diffraction patterns of the whole lenses and/or their nuclear parts were obtained for man and vertebrate animals. Crystalline lenses of the fishes Acerina cernua and Pelmatochromis kribensis, frog Rana temporaria, bull and man contain crystallins with a very similar secondary and tertiary structure, whereas lenses of chicks and the tortoise Testudo horsfieldi contain mainly crystallins with other structure. The results obtained reveal evolutionary conservatism of crystallin structure in fishes, amphibians and mammals. It was also concluded that there is no correlation between crystallin structure of the lens, elasticity of the latter and accommodation mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
The purpose of the present study was to compare the susceptibility of crystallins proteolyzed by ubiquitous calpain 2 and by lens-specific calpain Lp82 to insolubilization. To test this, transgenic (TG) mice expressing a calpain 2, in which the active site cysteine 105 was mutated to alanine, were produced. Expression of mutated calpain 2 was driven in lens by coupling the mutated gene to the betaB1-crystallin promoter. Light scattering was measured in solutions of lens proteins after activation of endogenous calpain 2 and/or Lp82. Mass spectrometric analysis was performed to determine the cleavage sites and the calpain responsible for insolubilization of crystallins. Lens proteins from TG mice incubated in vitro with calcium showed higher light scattering compared to proteins from wild type (WT) mice. alphaA-crystallin from TG mice was proteolyzed by Lp82. In contrast, alphaA-crystallin in lenses from WT mice were proteolyzed by both calpain 2 and Lp82. These results suggested that Lp82-induced proteolysis of crystallins caused increased susceptibility of truncated crystallins to in vitro precipitation. Since Lp82 is highest in young animals, Lp82-induced proteolysis and precipitation may be one of the factors responsible for the cataract formation in young rodents.  相似文献   

15.
Post-translational modifications in lens crystallins due to glycation and oxidation have been suggested to play a significant role in the development of cataracts associated with aging and diabetes. We have previously shown that alpha-keto acids, like pyruvate, can protect the lens against oxidation. We hypothesize that they can also prevent the glycation of proteins competitively by forming a Schiff base between their free keto groups and the free -NH(2) groups of protein as well as subsequently inhibit the oxidative conversion of the initial glycation product to advanced glycation end products (AGE). The purpose of this study was to investigate these possibilities using purified crystallins. The crystallins isolated from bovine lenses were incubated with fructose in the absence and presence of pyruvate. The post-incubation mixtures were analyzed for fructose binding to the crystallins, AGE formation, and the generation of high molecular weight (HMW) proteins. In parallel experiments, the keto acid was replaced by catalase, superoxide dismutase (SOD), or diethylene triaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA). This was done to ascertain oxidative mode of pyruvate effects. Interestingly, the glycation and consequent formation of AGE from alpha-crystallin was more pronounced than from beta-, and gamma-crystallins. The changes in the crystallins brought about by incubation with fructose were prevented by pyruvate. Catalase, SOD, and DTPA were also effective. The results suggest that pyruvate prevents against fructose-mediated changes by inhibiting the initial glycation reaction as well as the conversion of the initial glycated product to AGE. Hence it is effective in early as well as late phases of the reactions associated with the formation of HMW crystallin aggregates.  相似文献   

16.
We have employed recently developed blind modification search techniques to generate the most comprehensive map of post-translational modifications (PTMs) in human lens constructed to date. Three aged lenses, two of which had moderate cataract, and one young control lens were analyzed using multidimensional liquid chromatography mass spectrometry. In total, 491 modification sites in lens proteins were identified. There were 155 in vivo PTM sites in crystallins: 77 previously reported sites and 78 newly detected PTM sites. Several of these sites had modifications previously undetected by mass spectrometry in lens including carboxymethyl lysine (+58 Da), carboxyethyl lysine (+72 Da), and an arginine modification of +55 Da with yet unknown chemical structure. These new modifications were observed in all three aged lenses but were not found in the young lens. Several new sites of cysteine methylation were identified indicating this modification is more extensive in lens than previously thought. The results were used to estimate the extent of modification at specific sites by spectral counting. We tested the long-standing hypothesis that PTMs contribute to age-related loss of crystallin solubility by comparing spectral counts between the water-soluble and water-insoluble fractions of the aged lenses and found that the extent of deamidation was significantly increased in the water-insoluble fractions. On the basis of spectral counting, the most abundant PTMs in aged lenses were deamidations and methylated cysteines with other PTMs present at lower levels.  相似文献   

17.
Crystallins are a diverse group of proteins that constitute nearly 90% of the total soluble proteins of the vertebrate eye lens and these tightly packed crystallins are responsible for transparency of the lens. These proteins have been studied in different model and non-model species for understanding the modifications they undergo with ageing that lead to cataract, a disease of protein aggregation. In the present investigation, we studied the lens crystallin profile of the tropical freshwater catfish Rita rita. Profiles of lens crystallins were analyzed and crystallin proteome maps of Rita rita were generated for the first time. alphaA-crystallins, member of the alpha-crystallin family, which are molecular chaperons and play crucial role in maintaining lens transparency were identified by 1- and 2-D immunoblot analysis with anti-alphaA-crystallin antibody. Two protein bands of 19-20 kDa were identified as alphaA-crystallins on 1-D immunoblots and these bands separated into 10 discrete spots on 2-D immunoblot. However, anti-alphaB-crystallin and antiphospho-alphaB-crystallin antibodies were not able to detect any immunoreactive bands on 1- and 2-D immunoblots, indicating alphaB-crystallin was either absent or present in extremely low concentration in Rita rita lens. Thus, Rita rita alpha-crystallins are more like that of the catfish Clarias batrachus and the mammal kangaroo in its alphaA- and alphaB-crystallin content (contain low amount from 5-9% of alphaB-crystallin) and unlike the dogfish, zebrafish, human, bovine and mouse alpha-crystallins (contain higher amount of alphaB-crystallin from 25% in mouse and bovine to 85% in dogfish). Results of the present study can be the baseline information for stimulating further investigation on Rita rita lens crystallins for comparative lens proteomics. Comparing and contrasting the alpha-crystallins of the dogfish and Rita rita may provide valuable information on the functional attributes of alphaA- and alphaB-isoforms, as they are at the two extremes in terms of alphaA-and alphaB-crystallin content.  相似文献   

18.
Several post-translational modifications of lysine residues of lens proteins have been implicated in cataractogenesis. In the present study, the molecular weight of an alpha-crystallin isolated from the water-soluble portion of a cataractous human eye lens indicated that it was a modified alphaB-crystallin. Further analysis by mass spectrometry of tryptic digests of this modified protein showed that Lys 92 was modified and that the sample was structurally heterogeneous. Lys 92 was acetylated in one population and carbamylated in another. Although carbamylation of lens crystallins has been predicted, this is the first documentation of in vivo carbamylation of a specific site. These results are also the first documentation of in vivo lysine acetylation of alphaB-crystallin. Both modifications alter the net charge on alphaB-crystallin, a feature that may have significance to cataractogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
The level of lipid peroxidation products (LPP) was determined in the aqueous humor from the anterior chamber of patients with cataract and donor eyes. The content of LPP in senile cataract aqueous humor was shown to be significantly increased. To determine the possible mechanism of LPP increase in aqueous humor, human lenses at different stages of cataract as well as transparent human and rabbit lenses were incubated for 3 hours in 3.0 ml medium containing liposomes (0.5 mg/ml) prepared from phospholipids from the egg yolk and 0.14 M NaCl + 0.01 M TRIS-HCl buffer, pH 7.4). Corrections were made for phospholipid autooxidation. The level of LPP accumulation in the medium was determined by MDA assay. The rate of LPP production increased significantly in transparent lenses and in early senile cataract, as compared to controls and advanced (mature) cataracts. EDTA (1 mM), superoxide dismutase (114 u/sample), catalase (900 u/sample), chelated iron (III): Fe3+-ADP addition to the incubation medium depressed the level of LPP accumulation. This suggests the participation of Fe2+, O2-., H2O2 in the mechanism of LPP production in the lens. The induction of lipid peroxidation in the lens can be significant for leukotriene and prostaglandin synthesis in the eye.  相似文献   

20.
Disulfide bonding of lens crystallins contributes to the aggregation and insolubilization of these proteins that leads to cataract. A high concentration of reduced glutathione is believed to be key in preventing oxidation of crystallin sulfhydryls to form disulfide bonds. This protective role is decreased in aged lenses because of lower glutathione levels, especially in the nucleus. We recently found that human gamma-crystallins undergo S-methylation at exposed cysteine residues, a reaction that may prevent disulfide bonding. We report here that betaA1/A3-crystallins are also methylated at specific cysteine residues and are the most heavily methylated of the human lens crystallins. Among the methylated sites, Cys 64, Cys 99, and Cys 167 of betaA1-crystallin, methylation at Cys 99 is highest. Cys 64 and Cys 99 are also glutathiolated, even in a newborn lens. These post-translational modifications of the exposed cysteines may be important for maintaining the crystallin structure required for lens transparency. Previously unreported N-terminal truncations were also found.  相似文献   

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