Effect of grape polyphenols on oxidative stress in canine lens epithelial cells

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Abstract

Objective - To evaluate whether the effects of oxidative stress could be attenuated in cultures of canine lens epithelial cells (LECs) by incubation with grape seed proanthocyanidin extract (GSE), resveratrol (RES), or a combination of both (GSE+RES). Sample Population - Primary cultures of canine LECs. Procedures - LECs were exposed to 100μM tertiary butyl-hydroperoxide (TBHP) with or without GSE, RES, or GSE+RES. The dichlorofluorescein assay was used to detect production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and immunoblot analysis was used to evaluate the expression of stress-induced cell-signaling markers (ie, the mitogen-activated protein kinase [MAPK] and phosphoinositide-3 kinase [Pl3K] pathways). Results - GSE and GSE+RES significantly reduced ROS production after a 30-minute exposure to TBHP. Only GSE significantly reduced ROS production after a 120-minute exposure to TBHP. Incubation with GSE reduced TBHP-induced activity of the MAPK and Pl3K pathways. Conclusions and Clinical Relevance - GSE inhibited key components associated with cataractogenesis, ROS production, and stress-induced cell signaling. On the basis of the data reported here, there is strong evidence that GSE could potentially protect LECs from the damaging effects of oxidative stress.

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Barden, C. A., Chandler, H. L., Lu, P., Bomser, J. A., & Colitz, C. M. H. (2008). Effect of grape polyphenols on oxidative stress in canine lens epithelial cells. American Journal of Veterinary Research, 69(1), 94–100. https://doi.org/10.2460/ajvr.69.1.94

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