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Long-term development of lens fluorescence in a twin cohort: Heritability and effects of age and lifestyle

The blue-green autofluorescence of the ocular lens increases with age, glycemia and smoking, as the irreplaceable structural proteins of the lens slowly accumulate damage from the encounter with reactive molecular species. We have conducted a prospective study of lens autofluorescence over two decad...

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Autores principales: Bjerager, Jakob, Dabbah, Sami, Belmouhand, Mohamed, Kessel, Line, Hougaard, Jesper Leth, Rothenbuehler, Simon P., Sander, Birgit, Larsen, Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9135443/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35617652
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268458
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author Bjerager, Jakob
Dabbah, Sami
Belmouhand, Mohamed
Kessel, Line
Hougaard, Jesper Leth
Rothenbuehler, Simon P.
Sander, Birgit
Larsen, Michael
author_facet Bjerager, Jakob
Dabbah, Sami
Belmouhand, Mohamed
Kessel, Line
Hougaard, Jesper Leth
Rothenbuehler, Simon P.
Sander, Birgit
Larsen, Michael
author_sort Bjerager, Jakob
collection PubMed
description The blue-green autofluorescence of the ocular lens increases with age, glycemia and smoking, as the irreplaceable structural proteins of the lens slowly accumulate damage from the encounter with reactive molecular species. We have conducted a prospective study of lens autofluorescence over two decades in a twin cohort. The study included 131 phakic, non-diabetic adult twins (median age at follow-up 58 years, range 41–66 years) who were examined twice at an interval of 21 years. Change in anterior lens peak autofluorescence was analyzed in relation to age, current and baseline glycemia, cumulative smoking and heritability. The level of lens autofluorescence in the study population increased as a function of age and smoking (p ≤.002), but not as a function of glycemia (p ≥.069). Lens autofluorescence remained a highly heritable trait (90.6% at baseline and 93.3% at follow-up), but whereas the combined effect of age and cumulative smoking explained 57.2% of the variance in lens autofluorescence at baseline in mid-life, it only accounted for 31.6% at follow-up 21 years later. From mid to late adulthood, the level of blue-green fluorescence remained overwhelmingly heritable, but became less predictable from age, smoking habits and glycemic status. Presumably, as the lens ages, its intrinsic characteristics come to dominate over environmental and systemic factors, perhaps in a prelude to the development of cataract.
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spelling pubmed-91354432022-05-27 Long-term development of lens fluorescence in a twin cohort: Heritability and effects of age and lifestyle Bjerager, Jakob Dabbah, Sami Belmouhand, Mohamed Kessel, Line Hougaard, Jesper Leth Rothenbuehler, Simon P. Sander, Birgit Larsen, Michael PLoS One Research Article The blue-green autofluorescence of the ocular lens increases with age, glycemia and smoking, as the irreplaceable structural proteins of the lens slowly accumulate damage from the encounter with reactive molecular species. We have conducted a prospective study of lens autofluorescence over two decades in a twin cohort. The study included 131 phakic, non-diabetic adult twins (median age at follow-up 58 years, range 41–66 years) who were examined twice at an interval of 21 years. Change in anterior lens peak autofluorescence was analyzed in relation to age, current and baseline glycemia, cumulative smoking and heritability. The level of lens autofluorescence in the study population increased as a function of age and smoking (p ≤.002), but not as a function of glycemia (p ≥.069). Lens autofluorescence remained a highly heritable trait (90.6% at baseline and 93.3% at follow-up), but whereas the combined effect of age and cumulative smoking explained 57.2% of the variance in lens autofluorescence at baseline in mid-life, it only accounted for 31.6% at follow-up 21 years later. From mid to late adulthood, the level of blue-green fluorescence remained overwhelmingly heritable, but became less predictable from age, smoking habits and glycemic status. Presumably, as the lens ages, its intrinsic characteristics come to dominate over environmental and systemic factors, perhaps in a prelude to the development of cataract. Public Library of Science 2022-05-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9135443/ /pubmed/35617652 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268458 Text en © 2022 Bjerager et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bjerager, Jakob
Dabbah, Sami
Belmouhand, Mohamed
Kessel, Line
Hougaard, Jesper Leth
Rothenbuehler, Simon P.
Sander, Birgit
Larsen, Michael
Long-term development of lens fluorescence in a twin cohort: Heritability and effects of age and lifestyle
title Long-term development of lens fluorescence in a twin cohort: Heritability and effects of age and lifestyle
title_full Long-term development of lens fluorescence in a twin cohort: Heritability and effects of age and lifestyle
title_fullStr Long-term development of lens fluorescence in a twin cohort: Heritability and effects of age and lifestyle
title_full_unstemmed Long-term development of lens fluorescence in a twin cohort: Heritability and effects of age and lifestyle
title_short Long-term development of lens fluorescence in a twin cohort: Heritability and effects of age and lifestyle
title_sort long-term development of lens fluorescence in a twin cohort: heritability and effects of age and lifestyle
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9135443/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35617652
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268458
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