Abstract

The "protease inhibitor model of aging" has been proposed on the basis of observations that young rat brains, livers, and retinas exposed to a protease inhibitor, leupeptin, accumulate lipofuscin-like substances (LLS) that are similar to age pigment, and also display a variety of other manifestations of aging. In order to validate this hypothesis in more general terms, the present study reports attempts to induce age-like changes in kidney cells of young rats. Male F-344 rats (4-5 weeks of age) were continuously infused intraperitoneally (i.p.) with various doses of leupeptin (1-50 mg/100 g/day) for 2 weeks. Control animals received saline solution and normal aged rats (27-30 months-old) received no treatment. Animals were sacrificed and subjected to histological examination. In kidneys of leupeptin-, but not saline-treated rats, generally round-shaped PAS-positive particles were clearly observed, which were predominantly distributed in proximal convoluted tubules, and which resembled particles in normal aged kidneys. With increasing drug doses, particles tended to become bigger and more numerous. The dominant accumulation of LLS in cells of the proximal convoluted tubules had a fine morphologic configuration that resembled age pigments in old rats. Also, there was a concomitant thickening of the basement membrane that was present in leupeptin-treated and aged kidneys, but not in controls. The results, therefore, support the protease inhibitor model of aging and provide an experimental tool for probing the cellular mechanisms of aging.

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