Lenticular levels of amino acids and free UV filters differ significantly between normals and cataract patients.

@article{Streete2004LenticularLO,
  title={Lenticular levels of amino acids and free UV filters differ significantly between normals and cataract patients.},
  author={Isla M. Streete and Joanne F Jamie and Roger John Willis Truscott},
  journal={Investigative ophthalmology \& visual science},
  year={2004},
  volume={45 11},
  pages={
          4091-8
        }
}
PURPOSE To determine the levels of free UV filters and selected amino acids in cataract lenses compared with normal lenses. METHODS Indian cataract lenses (n=39) and normal lenses (n=6) were examined by HPLC to quantify levels of UV filter compounds, the UV filter precursor amino acid tryptophan (Trp), as well as tyrosine (Tyr) and uric acid. RESULTS The levels of the two major primate UV filters, 3-hydroxykynurenine glucoside (3OHKG) and 4-(2-amino-3-hydroxyphenyl)-4-oxobutanoic acid… 

Figures and Tables from this paper

Elevated Concentrations of Kynurenic Acid, a Tryptophan Derivative, in Dense Nuclear Cataracts
TLDR
KYNA levels are elevated in senile nuclear human cataracts and in cataractous lenses of rats with experimentally induced diabetes, according to the analysis of kynurenine aminotransferase I activity and kynurenic acid concentrations.
Quantitative metabolomic analysis of changes in the lens and aqueous humor under development of age-related nuclear cataract
TLDR
Comparison of metabolite concentrations in lens and corresponding AH reveal that the most important for the lens protection metabolites are synthesized in the lens epithelial cells, indicating that the age-related nuclear cataract development may originate from the dysfunction of theLens epithelium.
Protein-bound UV filters in normal human lenses: the concentration of bound UV filters equals that of free UV filters in the center of older lenses.
TLDR
The three Kyn UV filters are bound to the nuclear proteins of all normal lenses over the age of 50, and in the center of older normal lenses, the concentration of UV filters bound to proteins is approximately equal to that of the free filters.
Deaminated UV filter 3-hydroxykynurenine O-beta-D-glucoside is found in cataractous human lenses.
Tryptophan metabolites from young human lenses and the photooxidation of ascorbic acid by UVA light.
TLDR
The filter compounds present in human lenses can absorb UVA light and cause the oxidation of ascorbic acid in the presence and absence of oxygen, possibly initiating the glycation of lens proteins.
PROTECTIVE EFFECT OF AMINO ACIDS ON EYE LENSES AGAINST OXIDATIVE STRESS INDUCED BY HYDROGEN PEROXIDE
TLDR
Investigation of the effect of amino acids on mammalian eye lenses against oxidative stress in vitro indicates significant protective role of selected amino acids in H2O2 induced cataract model in vitro, which may open new prospective inCataract prevention by topical application of amino acid in the form of eye drops.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 37 REFERENCES
Free amino acids in senile cataractous lenses: possible osmotic etiology.
Comparison of free amino acids in freshly excised rabbit lenses and in lenses taken from the contralateral eyes after storage for 24 to 48 hours reveals essentially no postmortem changes. This
Major changes in human ocular UV protection with age.
TLDR
Results are consistent with a predominantly nuclear origin for both 4-(2-amino-3-hydroxyphenyl)-4-oxobutanoic acid glucoside and glutathione, which is in accord with their proposed mechanism of formation, which involves an initial deamination of 3-hydroxykynurenine glucosid.
Protein-bound kynurenine decreases with the progression of age-related nuclear cataract.
TLDR
Although protein-bound kynurenine accumulates over time in normal lenses, the levels attached to the proteins decrease significantly with the progression of age-related nuclear cataract, which suggests that in cataracts there is a breakdown of the protein- bound adducts.
UV filter instability: consequences for the human lens.
TLDR
It is likely that glutathione and NAD(P)H, but not ascorbate, protect proteins in the lens from modification by UV filters, and the interaction of the intermediates (alpha,beta-ketoalkenes) with lens components is investigated.
The photosensitiser xanthurenic acid is not present in normal human lenses.
Relationship between serum tryptophan and tryptophan metabolite levels after tryptophan ingestion in normal subjects and age-related cataract patients.
TLDR
It is concluded that there is a major subgroup of age-related cataract patients with a dysfunction in the metabolism of tryptophan, which may be related to the onset ofCataract.
UV filters in human lenses: tryptophan catabolism.
TLDR
A linear rate of 30HKG efflux from organ cultured lenses was observed indicating that one pathway for removal of this compound involves diffusion through the lens capsule, and that this pathway also occurs in vivo by analysing samples of human vitreous humour.
The presence of a human UV filter within the lens represents an oxidative stress.
TLDR
The presence of the primate UV filter 3OHKyn, at concentrations similar to those present in the human lens, was shown to produce considerable oxidative stress within the lens, as judged by its effect on GSH and the effect of exposure to hyperbaric oxygen was assessed.
Novel Protein Modification by Kynurenine in Human Lenses*
TLDR
Post-translational modification of lens proteins by tryptophan metabolites appears to be responsible, at least in part, for the age-dependent increase in coloration and fluorescence of the human lens, and this process may also be important in other tissues in which up-regulation of tryPTophan catabolism occurs.
...
1
2
3
4
...