RESUMO
PURPOSE: Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is an endogenously produced reactive oxygen species (ROS) present in a variety of mammalian systems. This particular ROS can play dichotomous roles, being beneficial in some cases and deleterious in others, which reflects the level and location of H2O2 production. While much is known about the redox regulation of ROS by antioxidant and repair systems in the lens, little is known about the endogenous production of H2O2 in embryonic lens tissue or the physiologic relevance of endogenous H2O2 to lens development. This gap in knowledge exists primarily from a lack of reagents that can specifically detect endogenous H2O2 in the intact lens. Here, using a recently developed chemoselective fluorescent boronate probe, peroxyfluor-6 acetoxymethyl ester (PF6-AM), which selectively detects H2O2 over related ROS, we examined the endogenous H2O2 signals in the embryonic lens. METHODS: Embryonic day 10 chick whole lenses in ex vivo organ culture and lens epithelial cells in primary culture were loaded with the H2O2 probe PF6-AM. To determine the relationship between localization of mitochondria with active membrane potential and the region of H2O2 production in the lens, cells were exposed to the mitochondrial probe MitoTracker Red CMXRos together with PF6-AM. Diphenyleneiodonium (DPI), a flavin inhibitor that blocks generation of intracellular ROS production, was used to confirm that the signal from PF6-AM was due to endogenous ROS production. All imaging was performed by live confocal microscopy. RESULTS: PF6-AM detected endogenous H2O2 in lens epithelial cells in whole lenses in ex vivo culture and in lens epithelial cells grown in primary culture. No endogenous H2O2 signal could be detected in differentiating lens fiber cells with this probe. Treatment with DPI markedly attenuated the fluorescence signal from the peroxide-specific probe PF6-AM in the lens epithelium, suggesting that basal generation of ROS occurs in this region. The lens epithelial cells producing an endogenous H2O2 signal were also rich in actively respiring mitochondria. CONCLUSIONS: PF6-AM can be used as an effective reagent to detect the presence and localization of endogenous H2O2 in live lens cells.
Assuntos
Epitélio/embriologia , Epitélio/metabolismo , Peróxido de Hidrogênio/metabolismo , Cristalino/embriologia , Cristalino/metabolismo , Animais , Respiração Celular , Embrião de Galinha , Células Epiteliais/metabolismo , Corantes Fluorescentes/metabolismo , Cristalino/citologia , Mitocôndrias/metabolismo , Oniocompostos/metabolismoRESUMO
Ion-channel blockers are molecules that obstruct the path used by ions to cross the membrane through a protein channel. Many of these are local anesthetics, toxins or drugs of abuse, and the knowledge of their mechanism of action at the atomic level is an important step towards the development of new compounds on a structural basis. A molecular model of the transmembrane region of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, an important brain and muscle fast signaling protein, was used as a target for docking several channel blockers by means of an automatic docking method. The combination of the independent docking method and molecular models (of the receptor and blockers) reproduced or explained quite accurately experimental data (photoaffinity labeling, site-directed mutagenesis, binding assays). This represents a strong support for the validity of the predictions made for those molecules for which no experimental data is available and also for the models and methods on which are based.