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Oxidation Scrutiny In Persuaded Aging And Chronological Aging At Systemic Redox Homeostasis Level

Authors :
Tamer Cebe
Aylin Irmak Kuruç
Ufuk Çakatay
Mustafa Erinç Sitar
Karolin Yanar
Ahmad Kunbaz
Seval Aydin
Tuna Ozan
Reza Mirmaroufizibandeh
Pinar Atukeren
Maltepe Üniversitesi, Tıp Fakültesi
Sitar, Mustafa Erinç
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Aperta, 2014.

Abstract

Background The effect of the natural aging process on systemic redox homeostasis is previously documented. However, none of the studies specify the effect of experimental aging on systemic redox homeostasis. The purpose of this study is to clarify the ambiguity raised in preliminary reports as to mimetic aging dependency of the type and magnitude of oxidative damage on constituents of plasma. Methods In the current study, we investigated the interrelationship among various groups of the systemic oxidative damage markers such as protein oxidation products (protein carbonyl groups, protein hydroperoxides, advanced oxidation protein products, protein thiol groups), lipid peroxidation products (malondialdehyde, lipid hydroperoxides, conjugated dienes), glycoxidation adducts (advanced glycation end products), and antioxidant capacity (ferric reducing/antioxidant power, Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase, total thiol, non-protein thiol). All these markers were measured in plasma of mimetically aged (MA) rats (5-month-old rats subjected to d -galactose-induced experimental aging), naturally aged (NA) rats (24-month-old), and their corresponding young controls (YC) (5 months old). Results and conclusions Our current results show that systemic oxidation markers of the MA group share significant similarities in terms of impaired redox homeostasis with the NA rats and may be considered as a reliable experimental aging model for intravascular aging. Additional methodological studies including d -galactose dosage and application time are warranted to clarify the potential involvement of all these systemic redox variations as mechanistic factors in the development of mimetic aging related intravascular deterioration. Reversing or preventing systemic oxidative damage in experimental and natural aging should therefore be considered the primary target for the development of effective therapeutic strategies to prevent or treat age-related vascular disorders.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....08543ca8a0aa73514cf9d3970b5ffa91