Abstract

To examine the effect of age on the glomerular basement membrane, compositional analyses were performed on membranes isolated in highly purified form from rats at different stages of their growth (35 to 200 days old). Substantial age-related changes were observed in the amino acid composition of the basement membranes. A significant correlation with age ( P < 0.01) was evident in the contents of 3- and 4-hydroxyproline, threonine, serine, alanine, valine, half-cystine, hydroxylysine, and lysine. Of these amino acids, hydroxylysine and both isomers of hydroxyproline demonstrated a progressive increase with age, while the others were found to decline. The direct relationship of hydroxylysine content with age ( P < 0.001) was associated with an inverse correlation of lysine with age ( P < 0.001) so that the ratio of hydroxylysine to lysine increased in a highly significant manner from 0.92 at 35 days to 1.33 at 200 days. This elevation in the hydroxylysine content was accompanied by an augmentation in the number of saccharide units linked to it so that the percentage glycosylation of this amino acid was not significantly affected by age. The relative differences in the hydroxylysine and lysine levels between young and older rats were maintained in sodium dodecyl sulfateextracted membranes. These results suggest that the compositional changes observed during the aging process reflect an alteration in the subunit makeup of the basement membrane, possibly due to an increased synthesis or decreased degradation of the more collagen-like polypeptide components.

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