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Dive into the research topics where Tadeusz Sarna is active.

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Featured researches published by Tadeusz Sarna.


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 1992

Properties and function of the ocular melanin--a photobiophysical view.

Tadeusz Sarna

This paper reviews the biosynthesis and physicochemical properties of the ocular melanin. Age-related changes of melanin granules and the corresponding formation of lipofuscin pigments in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) are also described. Adverse photoreactions of the eye and, in particular, light-induced damage to the RPE-retina are reviewed in relation to the ocular pigmentation. A hypothesis on the photoprotective role of the RPE melanin is presented that is based on the ability of the cellular melanin to bind redoxactive metal ions. Since bound-to-melanin metal ions are expected to be less damaging to the pigment cells, it is proposed that sequestration of heavy metal ions by the RPE melanin is an efficient detoxifying mechanism. It is postulated that oxidative degradation of RPE melanin may lower its metal-binding capability and decrease its anti-oxidant efficiency. Cellular and environmental factors that may contribute to possible oxidative damage of the RPE melanin are discussed in connection with the etiology of age-related macular degeneration.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Chemical and structural diversity in eumelanins : unexplored bio-optoelectronic materials

Marco d'Ischia; Alessandra Napolitano; Alessandro Pezzella; Paul Meredith; Tadeusz Sarna

Eumelanins, the characteristic black, insoluble, and heterogeneous biopolymers of human skin, hair, and eyes, have intrigued and challenged generations of chemists, physicists, and biologists because of their unique structural and optoelectronic properties. Recently, the methods of organic chemistry have been combined with advanced spectroscopic and imaging techniques, theoretical calculations, and methods of condensed-matter physics to gradually force these materials to reveal their secrets. Herein we review the latest advances in the field with a view to showing how the emerging knowledge is not only helping to explain eumelanin functionality, but may also be translated into effective strategies for exploiting their properties to create a new class of biologically inspired high-tech materials.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 1999

Free radical scavenging properties of melanin: Interaction of eu- and pheo-melanin models with reducing and oxidising radicals

Malgorzata Barbara Rozanowska; Tadeusz Sarna; Edward J. Land; T. G. Truscott

The human skin and eye melanin is commonly viewed as an efficient photoprotective agent. To elucidate the molecular mechanism of the melanin-dependent photoprotection, we studied the interaction of two synthetic melanins, dopa-melanin and cysteinyldopa-melanin, with a wide range of oxidising and reducing free radicals using the pulse radiolysis technique. We have found that although both types of free radicals could efficiently interact with the synthetic melanins, their radical scavenging properties depended, in a complex way, on the redox potential, the electric charge and the lifetime of the radicals. Repetitive pulsing experiments, in which the free radicals, probing the polymer redox sites, were generated from four different viologens, indicated that the eumelanin model had more reduced than oxidised groups accessible to reaction with the radicals. Although with many radicals studied, melanin interacted via simple one-electron transfer processes, the reaction of both melanins with the strongly oxidising peroxyl radical from carbon tetrachloride, involved radical addition. Our study suggests that the free radical scavenging properties of melanin may be important in the protection of melanotic cells against free radical damage, particularly if the reactive radicals are generated in close proximity to the pigment granules.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 1998

Blue light-induced singlet oxygen generation by retinal lipofuscin in non-polar media

Malgorzata Barbara Rozanowska; Jurina M. Wessels; Mike Boulton; Janice M. Burke; Michael A. J. Rodgers; T. George Truscott; Tadeusz Sarna

Accumulation of lipofuscin (LF) is a prominent feature of aging in the human retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells. This age pigment exhibits substantial photoreactivity, which may increase the risk of retinal photodamage and contribute to age-related maculopathy. In a previous study, we detected singlet oxygen generation by lipofuscin granules excited with blue light. In this paper we investigated the ability of hydrophobic components of lipofuscin to photogenerate singlet oxygen in non-polar environments. Singlet oxygen was detected directly by monitoring its characteristic phosphorescence at ca 1270 nm. The action spectrum of singlet oxygen formation indicated that this process was strongly wavelength-dependent and its efficiency decreased with increasing wavelength by a factor of ten, comparing 420 nm and 520 nm. The quantum yield of singlet oxygen increased with increasing concentration of oxygen. Using laser flash photolysis we studied the possible mechanism of singlet oxygen formation. The observed transient, with a broad absorption spectrum peaking at around 440 nm, was identified as a triplet with lifetime ca 11 microseconds. It was quenched by both molecular oxygen and beta-carotene with concomitant formation of a beta-carotene triplet state. These results indicate the potential role of hydrophobic components of lipofuscin in blue light-induced damage to the RPE.


Experimental Eye Research | 2003

Loss of melanin from human RPE with aging: possible role of melanin photooxidation

Tadeusz Sarna; Janice M. Burke; Witold Korytowski; Malgorzata Barbara Rozanowska; Christine M. B. Skumatz; Agnieszka Zaręba; Mariusz Zareba

The pigment melanin, which is believed to play a photoprotective role, was quantified here in human RPE cells from donors of different age. Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy was shown to provide a quantitative measure of melanin and was used as a non-destructive measure of melanin content. Results indicated an age-related melanin loss in RPE cells, with melanin content diminishing 2.5-fold between the first and the ninth decade of life. To determine whether photo-oxidation may contribute to age-related changes in RPE melanin, RPE in human eyecups, isolated human and bovine RPE cells, purified melanin granules, or synthetic dopa melanin were irradiated with various wavelengths and intensities of visible light. Samples were analysed for changes in melanin content by ESR spectroscopy, and by absorption and emission spectrophotometry. The concentration of hydrogen peroxide was measured in some samples, and some human eyecups were examined by transmission electron microscopy. Irradiation of RPE in eyecups with intense visible light was found to produce a time-dependent photobleaching of melanosomes that was accompanied by the formation of hydrogen peroxide. Photobleaching of isolated RPE melanosomes and synthetic dopa melanin resulted in enhanced melanin fluorescence, as previously shown for melanin from aged donors by others, and significantly reduced ESR signal intensity, resembling the changes in melanin with aging observed here. We conclude that the content of melanin in RPE cells undergoes an age-related change to which photo-oxidation may contribute. This observation raises the question of whether age-related changes in melanin reduce the photoprotective role of the pigment in aging RPE cells.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1978

Melanin photoreactions in aerated media: electron spin resonance evidence for production of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide.

Christopher C. Felix; James S. Hyde; Tadeusz Sarna; Roger C. Sealy

Abstract Electron spin resonance measurements on aerated melanin suspensions during photoirradiation show changes in the microwave saturation of melanin free radicals and formation of adducts in the presence of spin traps. These observations indicate that oxygen is reduced to superoxide and hydrogen peroxide.


Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research | 2013

Melanins and melanogenesis: methods, standards, protocols

Marco d'Ischia; Kazumasa Wakamatsu; Alessandra Napolitano; Stefania Briganti; José C. García-Borrón; Daniela Kovacs; Paul Meredith; Alessandro Pezzella; Mauro Picardo; Tadeusz Sarna; John D. Simon; Shosuke Ito

Despite considerable advances in the past decade, melanin research still suffers from the lack of universally accepted and shared nomenclature, methodologies, and structural models. This paper stems from the joint efforts of chemists, biochemists, physicists, biologists, and physicians with recognized and consolidated expertise in the field of melanins and melanogenesis, who critically reviewed and experimentally revisited methods, standards, and protocols to provide for the first time a consensus set of recommended procedures to be adopted and shared by researchers involved in pigment cell research. The aim of the paper was to define an unprecedented frame of reference built on cutting‐edge knowledge and state‐of‐the‐art methodology, to enable reliable comparison of results among laboratories and new progress in the field based on standardized methods and shared information.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 1987

PHOTOINDUCED GENERATION OF HYDROGEN PEROXIDE AND HYDROXYL RADICALS IN MELANINS

Witold Korytowski; B. Pilas; Tadeusz Sarna; B. Kalyanaraman

The hydrogen peroxide produced during photolysis of melanin pigments has been measured using an oxidase electrode. The photooxidation has been shown to occur via the superoxide intermediate. In the presence of superoxide dismutase the rate of photo‐induced production of hydrogen peroxide is increased, reflecting the ability of melanin to scavenge superoxide radicals. Evidence for metal‐ion dependent formation of hydroxyl radicals during photooxidation of melanin pigments was obtained using electron spin resonance‐spin trapping procedures. Superoxide dismutase increased the rate of formation of hydroxyl radicals in the system. Mechanisms of metal ion‐induced production of hydroxyl radicals during photolysis of melanin pigments are discussed.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2001

Photocytotoxicity of lipofuscin in human retinal pigment epithelial cells

Sallyanne Davies; Michael H. Elliott; Eric Floor; T. George Truscott; Mariusz Zareba; Tadeusz Sarna; Farrukh A. Shamsi; Mike Boulton

Lipofuscin accumulates with age in a variety of highly metabolically active cells, including the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) of the eye, where its photoreactivity has the potential for cellular damage. The aim of this study was to assess the phototoxic potential of lipofuscin in the retina. RPE cell cultures were fed isolated lipofuscin granules and maintained in basal medium for 7 d. Control cells lacking granules were cultured in an identical manner. Cultures were either maintained in the dark or exposed to visible light (2.8 mWcm2) at 37 degrees C for up to 48 h. Cells were subsequently assessed for alterations in cell morphology, cell viability, lysosomal stability, lipid peroxidation, and protein oxidation. Exposure of lipofuscin-fed cells to short wavelength visible light (390-550 nm) caused lipid peroxidation (increased levels of malondialdehyde and 4-hydroxy-nonenal), protein oxidation (protein carbonyl formation), loss of lysosomal integrity, cytoplasmic vacuolation, and membrane blebbing culminating in cell death. This effect was wavelength-dependent because light exposure at 550 to 800 nm had no adverse effect on lipofuscin-loaded cells. These results confirm the photoxicity of lipofuscin in a cellular system and implicate it in cell dysfunction such as occurs in ageing and retinal diseases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Role of semiconductivity and ion transport in the electrical conduction of melanin

Albertus B. Mostert; Benjamin J. Powell; Francis L. Pratt; Graeme R. Hanson; Tadeusz Sarna; Ian R. Gentle; Paul Meredith

Melanins are pigmentary macromolecules found throughout the biosphere that, in the 1970s, were discovered to conduct electricity and display bistable switching. Since then, it has been widely believed that melanins are naturally occurring amorphous organic semiconductors. Here, we report electrical conductivity, muon spin relaxation, and electron paramagnetic resonance measurements of melanin as the environmental humidity is varied. We show that hydration of melanin shifts the comproportionation equilibrium so as to dope electrons and protons into the system. This equilibrium defines the relative proportions of hydroxyquinone, semiquinone, and quinone species in the macromolecule. As such, the mechanism explains why melanin at neutral pH only conducts when “wet” and suggests that both carriers play a role in the conductivity. Understanding that melanin is an electronic-ionic hybrid conductor rather than an amorphous organic semiconductor opens exciting possibilities for bioelectronic applications such as ion-to-electron transduction given its biocompatibility.

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Janice M. Burke

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Mariusz Zareba

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Anna Pawlak

Jagiellonian University

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Anna Pilat

Jagiellonian University

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