Abstract

We examined the relation of hydrolytic enzymes in spleen to the aging process in mice over a period of 30 months. When the enzymatic activities were expressed as activities per milligrams protein, those of serine proteinases and dipeptidyl peptidase IV (Gly-Pro-AP) significantly decreased with age, whereas that of L-leucine aminopeptidase (Leu-AP) increased significantly. However, when expressed as total activities, the enzymatic activities in spleen generally tended to increase with age, except in the case of serine proteinases, because of the age-related increase in spleen weight. The results were taken to indicate that the activities of serine proteinases become relatively more deficient in the spleen as age increases. The results of a multivariate study maintained this peculiarity of serine proteinases in comparison with other enzymes. The relative deficiency of serine proteinases in spleen may be somehow related to immunodeficiency in aged animals, as judged from dimilar findings in animal models of systemic erythematodes.

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