Resistance to glycation in the zebra finch: mass spectrometry based analysis and its perspectives for evolutionary studies of ageing

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Brun, Charlotte | Hernandez-Alba, Oscar | Hovasse, Agnès | Criscuolo, François | Schaeffer-Reiss, Christine | Bertile, Fabrice

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. In humans, hyperglycemia is associated with protein glycation, which may contribute to ageing. Strikingly, birds usually outlive mammals of the same body mass, while exhibiting high plasma glucose levels. However, how birds succeed in escaping pro-ageing effects of glycation remains unknown. Using a specific mass spectrometry-based approach in captive zebra finches of known age, we recorded high glycaemia values but no glycated hemoglobin form was found. Still, we showed that zebra finch hemoglobin can be glycated in vitro, albeit only to a limited extent compared to its human homologue. This may be due to peculiar structural features, as supported by the unusual presence of three different tetramer populations with balanced proportions and a still bound cofactor that could be inositol pentaphosphate. High levels of the glycated forms of zebra finch plasma serotransferrin, carbonic anhydrase 2, and albumin were measured. Glucose, age or body mass correlations with either plasma glycated proteins or hemoglobin isoforms suggest that those variables may be future molecular tools of choice to monitor glycation and its link with individual fitness. Our molecular advance may help determine how evolution succeeded in associating flying ability, high blood glucose and long lifespan in birds.

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