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Human lens membrane cation permeability increases with age.
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1989
Year
Ionic BalanceOcular DiseaseHuman LensAgingOphthalmologyExperimental OphthalmologyPhysiologyCataractAgeing ProcessMembrane BiologyElectrophysiologyGlaucomaOcular Surface PhysiologyMedicineOcular TissueCellular PhysiologyMembrane Cation PermeabilityBiophysics
Parallel studies of the ionic balance and membrane permeability characteristics of normal human lenses were carried out in three countries (USA, England and Italy). Similar age-related changes were found in each laboratory. The lens membrane potential and resistance declined markedly with age while internal Na+ and free Ca2+ increased. There was a concomitant stimulation of Na+ and K+ transmembrane fluxes. These data indicate that in the ageing process there is an increasing contribution to membrane ion traffic from a channel, or channels, that permit Na+, K+ and Ca2+ to pass. The increase in permeability coincides exactly with the increase in optical density that occurs in the ageing human lens.