| Literature DB >> 31861871 |
Emmanuel Ankamah1,2, J Sebag3, Eugene Ng1,2, John M Nolan1.
Abstract
The transparent vitreous body, which occupies about 80% of the eye's volume, is laden with numerous enzymatic and non-enzymatic antioxidants that could protect the eye from oxidative stress and disease. Aging is associated with degeneration of vitreous structure as well as a reduction in its antioxidant capacity. A growing body of evidence suggests these age-related changes may be the precursor of numerous oxidative stress-induced vitreo-retinopathies, including vision degrading myodesopsia, the clinically significant entoptic phenomena that can result from advanced vitreous degeneration. Adequate intravitreal antioxidant levels may be protective against vitreous degeneration, possibly preventing and even improving vision degrading myodesopsia as well as mitigating various other vitreo-retinopathies. The present article is, therefore, a review of the different antioxidant molecules within vitreous and the inter-relationships between vitreous antioxidant capacity and degeneration.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidants; floaters; oxidative stress; vision degrading myodesopsia; vitreous; vitreous degeneration
Year: 2019 PMID: 31861871 PMCID: PMC7022282 DOI: 10.3390/antiox9010007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1Cross-sectional diagram of the human eye showing the vitreous body and the interaction between its two principal components, collagen and hyaluronan. Courtesy of Emmanuel Ankamah.
Figure 2Diagram showing the antioxidants within the human vitreous. Courtesy of Emmanuel Ankamah.
Table showing the concentrations of antioxidant molecules in human, animal, and diseased vitreous from previous studies.
| Antioxidant | Author | Human Vitreous * | Animal Vitreous | Vitreous from Diseased Eye |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ascorbic Acid | Duarte & Lunec [ | 2 mmol/L | 0.43 mmol/kg—rabbit | |
| Riboflavin | Philpot & Pirie [ | 0.8 µg/ 100 mL—ox | ||
| Glutathione | Sulochana et al. [ | | 2.8 µg/mg protein—ED | |
| Taurine | Diederen et al. [ | 22.6 µM | | 26.0 µM—RRD |
| Uric acid | Sebag [ | | 170 µM—bovine | |
| Tyrosine | Shih [ | 91 µmol/L | ||
| Transferrin | Kokavec [ | 0.0878 g/L | ||
| Selenium | Kokavec [ | 0.1035µmol/L | ||
| Zinc | Kokavec [ | 1.95µmol/L | ||
| Superoxide dismutase | Sulochana et al. [ | 0.9 IU/mg protein—ED | ||
| Glutathione peroxidase | Sulochana et al. [ | 0.61 µmol of GSH utilized/mg protein/min—ED | ||
| Catalase | Mayer [ | 58 µL O2/mg protein | ||
| PEDF | Ouchi et al. [ | 0.83 µg/mL | 2.03 µg/mL—DME |
*, Samples used were from cadaver or eyes undergoing vitrectomy for idiopathic macular holes or epiretinal membranes; ED, Eales’ disease; DVH, diabetic vitreous haemorrhage; PDR, proliferative diabetic retinopathy; PVR, proliferative vitreo-retinopathy; RRD, rhegmatogenous retinal detachment; DMO, diabetic macular oedema; GSH, reduced glutathione; PEDF, pigment epithelium-derived factor.
Figure 3Classification of vitreous antioxidants. Courtesy of Emmanuel Ankamah.