An in vitro approach to the chronological aging of skin by glycation of the collagen: the biological effect of glycation on the reconstructed skin model.Glycation is a slow, nonenzymatic reaction that takes place between free amino groups in proteins primarily from lysine lysine (lī`sēn), organic compound, one of the 20 amino acids commonly found in animal proteins. Only the l-stereoisomer appears in mammalian protein. and a reducing sugar such as glucose or ribose. In skin, this reaction creates new residues or formations of cross-links (advanced glycation end products, AGEs) in the extracellular matrix of the dermis dermis: see skin. . The formation of these bridges between dermal molecules is supposed to be responsible for loss of elasticity or other properties of the dermis observed during aging. Glycation may therefore play an important role in chronologic aging. In order to examine this hypothesis, we have developed a reconstructed skin model made of a modified dermal compartment that is a fibroblast-contracted collagen lattice prepared with preglycated collagen. The presence of AGEs (glycoxidation products) in the skin equivalents was evidenced using specific antibodies against carboxymethyllysine (CML 1. CML - A query language. ["Towards a Knowledge Description Language", A. Borgida et al, in On Knowledge Base Management Systems, J. Mylopoulos et al eds, Springer 1986]. 2. CML - Concurrent ML. ). Several changes were observed after collagen glycation: (1) fibroblast fibroblast /fi·bro·blast/ (fi´bro-blast) 1. an immature fiber-producing cell of connective tissue capable of differentiating into chondroblast, collagenoblast, or osteoblast. 2. shape and distribution (vimentin staining) were modified; (2) extracellular matrix molecules and the dermal-epidermal junction zone seemed to be enhanced (procollagen I and III, collagen IV and VII stainings); (3) stainings for beta1 and alpha6 integrins integrins (inˑ·t n.pl. were also increased in the epidermal cell layer; and (4) collagenase collagenase /col·la·ge·nase/ (kah-laj´e-nas) an enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of peptide bonds in triple helical regions of collagen. col·lag·e·nase n. activity was increased. To verify the biological effect of glycation, we used the well-known glycation inhibitor aminoguanidine. After aminoguanidine treatment, we found a low CML amount and decreased distribution of markers previously overexpressed in glycated skin constructs. These in vitro findings were at least in part related to aging in vivo and demonstrate an actual effect of glycation in skin aging. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2005 Jun;1043:529-32 |
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