Dietary restriction slows age pigment accumulation in the retinal pigment epithelium. 1993

M L Katz, and H A White, and C L Gao, and G S Roth, and J J Knapka, and D K Ingram
Mason Institute of Ophthalmology, University of Missouri School of Medicine, Mason Institute of Ophthalmology, Columbia 65212.

OBJECTIVE The accumulation of age pigment, or lipofuscin, in postmitotic cells appears to be a universal feature of the aging process in animals. In mammals, the lipofuscin content of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) increases progressively during senescence. Dietary restriction has been shown to slow the rate at which many biologic parameters change during aging. Experiments were conducted to determine if dietary restriction alters the rate of age pigment accumulation in the RPE. METHODS Male Wistar rats were placed on one of three dietary regimens starting at weaning. One group was fed a nutritionally complete diet ad libitum. Another group was fed the same diet but was only allowed to consume 60% as much food daily as the ad libitum group ate. The final group was fed ad libitum a nutritionally complete diet that had a lower caloric density per gram than the diets fed to the other animals primarily because of the replacement of carbohydrate with oat fiber. Ultrastructural morphometric analysis was used to determine the RPE age pigment content in the first group at 6 months of age, and in all of the groups at 18 months of age. RESULTS Dietary restriction, achieved either by reducing total food intake or by reducing the caloric content of the diet, resulted in significant decreases in RPE lipofuscin accumulation. CONCLUSIONS Dietary restriction provides a relatively simple means by which RPE age pigment content can be modulated. This should prove useful in assessing the role of RPE lipofuscin accumulation in age-related retinal disorders. That the oat fiber diet fed ad libitum was almost as effective as restriction of total food intake in slowing RPE age pigment accumulation indicates that the effect of restricted caloric intake is not mediated by almost constant hunger.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008062 Lipofuscin A naturally occurring lipid pigment with histochemical characteristics similar to ceroid. It accumulates in various normal tissues and apparently increases in quantity with age.
D008297 Male Males
D010857 Pigment Epithelium of Eye The layer of pigment-containing epithelial cells in the RETINA; the CILIARY BODY; and the IRIS in the eye. Eye Pigment Epithelium
D002149 Energy Intake Total number of calories taken in daily whether ingested or by parenteral routes. Caloric Intake,Calorie Intake,Intake, Calorie,Intake, Energy
D004043 Dietary Fiber The remnants of plant cell walls that are resistant to digestion by the alimentary enzymes of man. It comprises various polysaccharides and lignins. Fiber, Dietary,Roughage,Wheat Bran,Bran, Wheat,Brans, Wheat,Dietary Fibers,Fibers, Dietary,Roughages,Wheat Brans
D000375 Aging The gradual irreversible changes in structure and function of an organism that occur as a result of the passage of time. Senescence,Aging, Biological,Biological Aging
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D017208 Rats, Wistar A strain of albino rat developed at the Wistar Institute that has spread widely at other institutions. This has markedly diluted the original strain. Wistar Rat,Rat, Wistar,Wistar Rats
D051381 Rats The common name for the genus Rattus. Rattus,Rats, Laboratory,Rats, Norway,Rattus norvegicus,Laboratory Rat,Laboratory Rats,Norway Rat,Norway Rats,Rat,Rat, Laboratory,Rat, Norway,norvegicus, Rattus

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