Ripps Harris, Shen Wen
Departments of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Anatomy and Cell Biology, Physiology and Biophysics, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60612, USA.
Mol Vis. 2012;18:2673-86. Epub 2012 Nov 12.
Taurine is an organic osmolyte involved in cell volume regulation, and provides a substrate for the formation of bile salts. It plays a role in the modulation of intracellular free calcium concentration, and although it is one of the few amino acids not incorporated into proteins, taurine is one of the most abundant amino acids in the brain, retina, muscle tissue, and organs throughout the body. Taurine serves a wide variety of functions in the central nervous system, from development to cytoprotection, and taurine deficiency is associated with cardiomyopathy, renal dysfunction, developmental abnormalities, and severe damage to retinal neurons. All ocular tissues contain taurine, and quantitative analysis of ocular tissue extracts of the rat eye revealed that taurine was the most abundant amino acid in the retina, vitreous, lens, cornea, iris, and ciliary body. In the retina, taurine is critical for photoreceptor development and acts as a cytoprotectant against stress-related neuronal damage and other pathological conditions. Despite its many functional properties, however, the cellular and biochemical mechanisms mediating the actions of taurine are not fully known. Nevertheless, considering its broad distribution, its many cytoprotective attributes, and its functional significance in cell development, nutrition, and survival, taurine is undoubtedly one of the most essential substances in the body. Interestingly, taurine satisfies many of the criteria considered essential for inclusion in the inventory of neurotransmitters, but evidence of a taurine-specific receptor has yet to be identified in the vertebrate nervous system. In this report, we present a broad overview of the functional properties of taurine, some of the consequences of taurine deficiency, and the results of studies in animal models suggesting that taurine may play a therapeutic role in the management of epilepsy and diabetes.
牛磺酸是一种参与细胞容积调节的有机渗透溶质,并为胆盐的形成提供底物。它在调节细胞内游离钙浓度方面发挥作用,尽管它是少数几种不掺入蛋白质的氨基酸之一,但牛磺酸却是大脑、视网膜、肌肉组织及全身各器官中含量最丰富的氨基酸之一。牛磺酸在中枢神经系统中发挥着广泛的功能,从发育到细胞保护,而牛磺酸缺乏与心肌病、肾功能障碍、发育异常以及视网膜神经元的严重损伤有关。所有眼组织都含有牛磺酸,对大鼠眼眼组织提取物的定量分析表明,牛磺酸是视网膜、玻璃体、晶状体、角膜、虹膜和睫状体中含量最丰富的氨基酸。在视网膜中,牛磺酸对光感受器发育至关重要,并作为一种细胞保护剂,抵御与应激相关的神经元损伤及其他病理状况。然而,尽管牛磺酸具有许多功能特性,但其介导作用的细胞和生化机制尚未完全明确。尽管如此,鉴于其广泛分布、众多的细胞保护特性及其在细胞发育、营养和存活方面的功能意义,牛磺酸无疑是体内最重要的物质之一。有趣的是,牛磺酸满足了许多被认为是神经递质清单中必需的标准,但在脊椎动物神经系统中尚未发现牛磺酸特异性受体的证据。在本报告中,我们对牛磺酸的功能特性、牛磺酸缺乏的一些后果以及动物模型研究结果进行了全面概述,这些结果表明牛磺酸可能在癫痫和糖尿病的治疗中发挥作用。