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Comparative Study
. 2005 Jan-Feb;121(1):37-9.

[New regulatory protein isolated from the bovine eye lens and its action on the cataract development in rat in vitro]

[Article in Russian]
  • PMID: 15759848
Comparative Study

[New regulatory protein isolated from the bovine eye lens and its action on the cataract development in rat in vitro]

[Article in Russian]
M S Krasnov et al. Vestn Oftalmol. 2005 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

The regulatory protein was isolated from the eye lens extract by using an early designed scheme including by means of salting-out of proteins by ammonium sulphate, isoelectrofocusing in pH gradient and electrophoresis in PAAG. A high-purity fraction of the regulatory protein was obtained. The localization of the regulatory protein in the rat-eye lens was investigated by means of primary rabbit antibodies obtained within the case study and by FITS-marked secondary antibodies. Cataractogenesis was induced, in vitro, in Wistar rat lenses through adding, to the cultivation medium, hydrogen peroxide (0.5 mM) or calcium chloride (15 mM). The regulatory protein isolated from the bovine eye lens was added alongside with damaging antibodies to the nutrition medium, concentration 10(-12) mg/ml. The lenses were cultivated for as long as 8 days at 37 degrees C. The degree of opacification of lenses was evaluated visually with the help of a lined substrate as well as by spectrophotometry. The studied protein was shown immunohistochemically to be localized in the intercellular space of the lens epithelium in the region of the basic membrane. The cataractogenesis-related research of the regulatory protein was made on rabbit eye lenses, which were cultivated as a whole for as long as 8 days in vitro. Their transparency and morphology were preserved in them in full since they were cultivated in a serum-free nutrition without admixture of any destructive agents. Opacification of lenses was induced in vitro by changing the concentration of calcium ions in the cultivation medium or through adding hydrogen peroxide to the medium. The valuations of the lens opacity degree as observed in different research series and made by visual observation well correlate with the results of spectrophotometry of lenses made after their cultivation. It can be stated that the studied regulatory protein, when added to the cultivation medium, enhances about two-fold the lens transparency versus the lenses cultivated in the catactogenesis-containing medium. Finally, very small doses of the regulatory protein isolated from the bovine eye lens were found to prevent cataractogenesis in rats in vitro. Since the studied regulatory protein was localized by us in the region of epithelium, it can be suggested that its protective action is conditioned by its ability to contribute to regulating the main biological processes occurring in the lens capsule.

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