| Literature DB >> 3350069 |
B C Barron1, N T Yu, J F Kuck.
Abstract
The laser Raman optical dissection technique makes it possible to study individual points of minute volumes (2 X 10(-3) microliter) in the intact living lens in vitro. This technique was used to measure the sulfhydryl and disulfide content of 21 distinct points along the visual axis of the guinea-pig lens after aging and long-wave ultraviolet exposure (9-month duration in vivo). To facilitate comparison between different lenses, data was compiled as the intensity ratio of sulfhydryl (2580 cm-1) to a protein reference signal (2731 cm-1) or disulfide (508 cm-1) to phenylalanine (622 cm-1). These 21 ratios for each experiment were plotted as a function of the distance of the point from the nuclear center of the lens to give a visual axis profile. From these profiles we have found that the loss of sulfhydryl can be accelerated in the guinea-pig lens by in vivo ultraviolet exposure (353 nm peak from an incoherent source) for nine months. There is also a subsequent uniform increase in the disulfide content across the visual axis after UV exposure suggesting a direct sulfhydryl to disulfide conversion in the guinea-pig lens.Entities:
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Year: 1988 PMID: 3350069 DOI: 10.1016/s0014-4835(88)80082-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Eye Res ISSN: 0014-4835 Impact factor: 3.467