4.7 Article

Do glutathione levels decline in aging human brain?

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 93, Issue -, Pages 110-117

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2016.01.029

Keywords

Glutathione; Oxidative stress; Aging; Human brain; Postmortem

Funding

  1. US NIDA/NIH [DA07182]
  2. New Zealand Institute of Environmental Science and Research, Ltd.
  3. Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Foundation

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For the past 60 years a major theory of aging is that age-related damage is largely caused by excessive uncompensated oxidative stress. The ubiquitous tripeptide glutathione is a major antioxidant defense mechanism against reactive free radicals and has also served as a marker of changes in oxidative stress. Some (albeit conflicting) animal data suggest a loss of glutathione in brain senescence, which might compromise the ability of the aging brain to meet the demands of oxidative stress. Our objective was to establish whether advancing age is associated with glutathione deficiency in human brain. We measured reduced glutathione (GSH) levels in multiple regions of autopsied brain of normal subjects (n=74) aged one day to 99 years. Brain GSH levels during the infancy/teenage years were generally similar to those in the oldest examined adult group (76-99 years). During adulthood (23-99 years) GSH levels remained either stable (occipital cortex) or increased (caudate nucleus, frontal and cerebellar cortices). To the extent that GSH levels represent glutathione antioxidant capacity, our postmortem data suggest that human brain aging is not associated with declining glutathione status. We suggest that aged healthy human brains can maintain antioxidant capacity related to glutathione and that an age-related increase in GSH levels in some brain regions might possibly be a compensatory response to increased oxidative stress. Since our findings, although suggestive, suffer from the generic limitations of all postmortem brain studies, we also suggest the need for replication investigations employing the new H-1 MRS imaging procedures in living human brain. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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