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LOWERING
OF PROTEIN GLYCATION |
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Department of Biochemistry, Jawaharlal
Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research,
Pondicherry - 605 006.
Several studies have indicated the presence
of increased oxidative stress as a critical feature in
the pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD). Another biochemical complication leading to pathogenesis
is protein glycation. The nexus between oxidative stress
and protein glycation in various pathological conditions
is being unraveled. Increased oxidative stress can lead
to enhanced protein glycation by a process of auto-oxidative
glycation. No information is available in the literature
regarding protein glycation among COPD patients. Eleven
non-diabetic COPD patients were included in the study
and equal number of age and sex-matched healthy individuals
were enrolled as controls. The whole-blood reduced glutathione
was found to be less among the patients while lipid peroxides
and fructosamine were elevated in comparison to control.
The present study confirmed oxidative stress and enhanced
protein glycation among the COPD patients. Antioxidant
therapy may be considered as part of the treatment regimen
for COPD patients.
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Department of Biochemical Sciences
Charles University in Prague Faculty of Pharmacy, Hradec
Kralove Czech Republic.
Non-enzymatic glycation as the chain
reaction between reducing sugars and free amino groups
of proteins has been shown to correlate with physiological
ageing and severity of diabetes. The process involves
oxidative steps (glycoxidation). In this paper, the effect
of D-fructose as a reactive sugar on aspartate aminotransferase
(AST) as a model protein was monitored by measurements
of the enzyme activity and formation of fluorescent advanced
glycation end products (AGEs). Change in the AST activity
was considered as a measure of the overall protein damage
caused by glycation, and total AGEs and pentosidine represent,
at least partly, the formation of glycoxidation products.
Catalytic activity of AST in an incubation mixture containing
D-fructose (50 mmol L(-1)), decreased compared to control
values to 42% (p < 0.05) and to 11% (p < 0.05) on
the 5th and on 21st day of incubation, respectively. In
the presence of fructose, total fluorescent AGEs concentration
was significantly higher since 5th day of incubation (110%,
p < 0.05) and the fluorescent pentosidine concentration
from 15th day of incubation (117%, p < 0.05) compared
to control values, respectively. Catalytic activity of
AST clearly and quantitatively demonstrated functional
changes in the enzyme molecule caused by structural modifications
initiated by fructose, while the evaluation of AGE formation
and especially that of pentosidine by fluorescence measurement
was less reliable.
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Institute of Pathology, Case Western
Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA.
The accumulation of Maillard reaction
products increases with age in long-lived proteins and
can be retarded by caloric restriction. Here we determined
whether caloric restriction inhibits formation of glycation
and glycoxidation products in skin collagen of squirrel
and rhesus monkeys between 1990-1997. Restricted monkeys
(n = 11, n = 30, respectively) were maintained at 70%
of caloric intake of controls (n = 25, n = 32, respectively).
Glycation was assessed by furosine and glycoxidation by
pentosidine and carboxymethyl-lysine. With age, the rate
of furosine formation moderately but nonsignificantly
(p >.05) increased in both control monkey groups. It
significantly (p =.011) decreased in the caloric-restricted
rhesus, but not squirrel monkeys. Caloric restriction
did not significantly decrease the pentosidine or carboxymethyl-lysine
rates in either species of monkeys. These results suggest
that caloric restriction, when maintained long-term in
nonhuman primates, tends to decrease glycation, but not
glycoxidation.
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Service de Biologie Cellulaire, Commissariat
a l'Energie Atomique/Saclay, Gif-sur-Yvette, France.
ABSTRACT.: Tissue content of advanced
glycation end products (AGE) increases with age and contributes
to the changes in structure and function of the renal
and cardiovascular systems. The effect of chronic food
restriction on this AGE accumulation was investigated
in lean WAG/Rij rats. A 30% food restriction performed
from 10 to 30 mo in female rats reduced their mean body
weight from 240 +/- 7 to 160 +/- 12 g, but did not modify
their survival. AGE collagen content increased from 14.3
+/- 5.5 to 104.7 +/- 13.0 arbitrary units per microgram
(AU/microg) of hydroxyproline (OHPro) in kidney between
10 and 30 mo, and from 9.7 +/- 1.2 to 310.6 +/- 34.6 AU/microg
OHPro in the abdominal aorta. Food restriction reduced
AGE accumulation to 21.4 +/- 3.3 and 74.6 +/- 16.5 AU/microg
OHPro in kidney and aorta of 30-mo-old animals. Similar
results were found for collagen prepared from isolated
glomeruli (7.8 +/- 1.2, 81.2 +/- 16.1, and 10.3 +/- 4.3
AU/microg OHPro in 10-mo, 30-mo, and restricted 30-mo-old
rats). Reduction of intrarenal and arterial AGE accumulation
by food restriction was confirmed by immunostaining in
optical microscopy. Age-related changes in arterial and
kidney structures as polyuria and proteinuria were mainly
prevented by food restriction. These data indicate that
chronic food restriction reduces the accumulation of AGE
and preserves the structure and function of the renal
and cardiovascular systems in learn rats, although it
did not affect survival of the animals between 10 and
30 m.
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