Cysteine sulfinate decarboxylase and cysteine dioxygenase activities do not correlate with strain-specific changes in hepatic and cerebellar taurine content in aged rats
B. Eppler et R. Dawson, Cysteine sulfinate decarboxylase and cysteine dioxygenase activities do not correlate with strain-specific changes in hepatic and cerebellar taurine content in aged rats, MECH AGE D, 110(1-2), 1999, pp. 57-72
Taurine is a free sulfur-containing amino acid that is found in abundance i
n mammalian tissues and fluids. Many biological roles have been proposed fo
r this amino acid, including reducing oxidative stress and cytotoxicity. Ta
urine has previously been reported to decline in tissues during aging which
could exacerbate an age-related increase in oxidative stress. The aim of t
he present study was to elucidate the mechanism responsible for the observe
d decline in tissue taurine content. We measured the activity of the major
taurine biosynthetic enzymes, cysteine sulfinate decarboxylase and cysteine
dioxygenase, in liver and cerebellar tissues of rats. Tissues from male ad
ult and aged Fischer 344 (F344; 10 and 28 months), Sprague-Dawley (SD; 5, 2
0 and 25 months), and F344/Brown-Norway hybrid (FBNF1; 14 and 33.5 months)
rats were used. We observed a significant decline in hepatic taurine conten
t of the F344 animals but the decline in the liver of SD and FBNF1 animals
was non-significant. Hepatic cysteine sulfinate decarboxylase and cysteine
dioxygenase activities were significantly lower in aged F344 rats but not i
n the other strains. Cerebellar taurine content was significantly lower in
aged F344 and SD rats without a concomitant decline in cysteine sulfinate d
ecarboxylase activity. These results suggest that a decline in hepatic de n
ovo taurine biosynthesis might be partially responsible for a reduction in
tissue taurine content in F344 rats. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd.
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