AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the effects of C-Phycocyanin (C-PC) on gene expression related to cataract formation in rats induced by sodium selenite.
  • Rat pups were treated with different injections, and mRNA levels related to lens transparency were analyzed, showing that C-PC treatment helped regulate abnormal gene expression patterns caused by selenite.
  • The findings suggest that C-PC could be a promising antioxidant treatment to delay or prevent cataracts, making it a potential candidate for future therapies against age-related cataract development.

Article Abstract

Purpose: This study was designed to examine the constrictive potential of C-Phycocyanin (C-PC) in regulating changes imposed on gene expression in the selenite-induced cataract model.

Methods: Wistar rat pups were divided into three groups of eight each. On P10, Group I received an intraperitoneal injection of normal saline. Groups II and III received a subcutaneous injection of sodium selenite (19 μmol/kg bodyweight); Group III also received an intraperitoneal injection of C-PC (200 mg/kg bodyweight) on P9-14. Total RNA was isolated on P16, and the relative abundance of mRNA of the crystallin structural genes, redox components, and apoptotic cascade were ascertained with real-time PCR with reference to the internal control β-actin.

Results: Real-time PCR analysis showed the crystallin genes (αA-, βB1-, γD-) and redox cycle components (Cat, SOD-1, Gpx) were downregulated, the apoptotic components were upregulated, and antiapoptotic Bcl-2 was downregulated in Group II. Treatment with 200 mg/kg bodyweight C-PC (Group III) transcriptionally regulated the instability of the expression of these genes, thus ensuring C-PC is a prospective anticataractogenic agent that probably delays the onset and progression of cataractogenesis induced by sodium selenite.

Conclusions: C-PC treatment possibly prevented cataractogenesis triggered by sodium selenite, by regulating the lens crystallin, redox genes, and apoptotic cascade mRNA expression and thus maintains lens transparency. C-PC may be developed as a potential antioxidant compound applied in the future to prevent and treat age-related cataract.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4301595PMC

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