The absence of clinical tools to evaluate individual variation in the pace of aging represents a major impediment to understanding aging and maximizing health throughout life. The human lens is an ideal tissue for quantitative assessment of molecular aging in vivo. Long-lived proteins in lens fiber cells are expressed during fetal life, do not undergo turnover, accumulate molecular alterations throughout life, and are optically accessible in vivo. We used quasi-elastic light scattering (QLS) to measure age-dependent signals in lenses of healthy human subjects. Age-dependent QLS signal changes detected in vivo recapitulated time-dependent changes in hydrodynamic radius, protein polydispersity, and supramolecular order of human lens proteins during long-term incubation (~1 year) and in response to sustained oxidation (~2.5 months) in vitro. Our findings demonstrate that QLS analysis of human lens proteins provides a practical technique for noninvasive assessment of molecular aging in vivo.
CITATION STYLE
Minaeva, O., Sarangi, S., Ledoux, D. M., Moncaster, J. A., Parsons, D. S., Washicosky, K. J., … Le Couteur, D. (2020). In Vivo Quasi-Elastic Light Scattering Eye Scanner Detects Molecular Aging in Humans. Journals of Gerontology - Series A Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences, 75(9), e53–e62. https://doi.org/10.1093/gerona/glaa121
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