The Maillard reaction, a non-enzymatic reaction of ketones and aldehydes with amino groups of proteins, contributes to the aging of proteins and to complications associated with diabetes. Methylglyoxal (MG) is a 2-oxoaldehyde derived from glycolytic intermediates and produced during the Maillard reaction. We reported previously the formation of a lysine-lysine protein crosslinking structure (imidazolysine) and a fluorescent arginine modification (argpyrimidine) from the Maillard reaction of MG. Here we show that rabbit antibodies to MG-modified ribonuclease A identify proteins modified by the Maillard reaction of glucose, fructose, ribose, glyceraldehyde, glyoxal, ascorbate, and ascorbate oxidation products (dehydroascorbate, 2,3-diketogulonate, L-xylosone, and L-threose) in addition to those modified by MG. The antibody recognized imidazolysine and argpyrimidine and a glyoxal-derived lysine-lysine cross-link. It did not react with N⑀-carboxymethyllysine. Incubations with amino acids revealed strongest reactivity with N␣-tbutoxycarbonylarginine and MG, and we identified argpyrimidine as one of the epitopes from this incubation mixture. Serum proteins from human diabetics reacted more strongly with the antibody than those from normal individuals, and the levels correlated with glycemic control. Collagen from human corneas contained MG-derived modifications, with those from older subjects containing higher levels of modified proteins than those from younger ones. An immunoaffinity-purified antibody showed higher reactivity with old corneas than with younger ones and localized the antigens primarily within the stromal region of the cornea. These results confirm reported MG-derived modifications in tissue proteins and show that dicarbonyl-mediated protein modification occurs during Maillard reactions in vivo.
Efforts should be made to propagate a similar protocol for the production of ASEs in blood centres capable of collecting and processing blood products, making this service affordable and uniformly accessible to patients.
If you have a burning desire to respond to a paper published in BJO, why not make use of our ''rapid response'' option? Log onto our website (www.bjophthalmol. com), find the paper that interests you, and send your response via email by clicking on the ''eLetters'' option in the box at the top right hand corner. Providing it isn't libellous or obscene, it will be posted within seven days. You can retrieve it by clicking on ''read eLetters'' on our homepage. The editors will decide as before whether to also publish it in a future paper issue.
Laser-assisted subepithelial keratectomy was an effective, predictable, and safe procedure for the treatment of myopia and myopic astigmatism. Further studies are needed to determine the role of LASEK in the refractive surgery spectrum.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.