Abstract
The induction of galactose-type cataracts in rats with a yogurt diet (1) resembles the natural cataractogenic action of the milk sugars in patients with galactosemia, a hereditary disease characterized by galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase deficiency. The role of the transferase and other galactose-metabolizing enzymes in the pathogenesis of cataracts in rats has not been assessed, however, although enzymes in the glycolytic (2-4) and oxidative shunt pathways (5, 6) are inhibited when rats are fed strict galactose diets. Indeed, the decreasing activities of the liver enzymes, galactokinase (7), transferase (8, 9), and uridine diphosphogalactose-4-epimerase (10) in the aging rat suggest that one or all of the enzymes of the sugar nucleotide pathway limit carbohydrate metabolism in rats fed on galactose. There appears to be a similar age-dependence in the respective red cell enzymes.Materials and Methods. Male Wistar rats were bled from the heart at 1, 2, 3, 8, and 16 weeks of age in groups of three o...
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More From: Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)
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