Title of article
Tocopherol-mediated modulation of age-related changes in microglial cells: Turnover of extracellular oxidized protein material
Author/Authors
Alexandra Stolzing، نويسنده , , Rebecca Widmer، نويسنده , , Tobias Jung، نويسنده , , Peter Voss، نويسنده , , Tilman Grune، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
10
From page
2126
To page
2135
Abstract
Proteins accumulate during aging and form insoluble protein aggregates. Microglia are responsible for their removal from the brain. During aging, changes within the microglia might play a crucial role in the malfunctioning of these cells. Therefore, we isolated primary microglial cells from adult rats and compared their activation status and their ability to degrade proteins to that of microglial cells isolated from newborn animals. The ability of adult microglial cells to degrade proteins is substantially decreased. However, the preincubation of microglial cells with vitamin E improves significantly the degradation of such modified proteins. The degradation of proteins from apoptotic vesicles is decreased in microglia isolated from adult rats. This might be the result of a suppression of the CD36 receptor due to vitamin E treatment. We concluded that microglial cells isolated from adult organisms have different metabolic properties and seem to be a more valuable model to study age-related diseases.
Keywords
protein degradation , Oxidized proteins , aging , Microglia , vitamin E , CD36
Journal title
Free Radical Biology and Medicine
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Free Radical Biology and Medicine
Record number
520590
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