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Vitamins B, E, K Objectives • Know the names, vitamer and cofactor forms of vitamins B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, B7, B9, and B12. Know major sources of each, USRDA. • Know major cofactor reaction type for each of the B vitamins and vitamin K. • Know the sources for vitamin E and K. • Understand uptake systems for B12 and folic acid. • Understand deficiency disorders and toxicity for the B vitamins and K and E. The B’s Designation –vitamer form – cofactor form • B1 – Thiamine - thiamine pyrophosphate • B2 – Riboflavin – FMN, FAD • B3 – Niacin – NAD+, NADP+. • B5 – Pantothenic acid – Coenzyme A • B6 – Pyridoxine, pyridoxal, pyridoxamine – pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) • B7 – Biotin - biotin • B9 – Folic acid - tetrahydrofolate • B12 – Cobalamin – (deoxyadenosyl cobalamin, methyl cobalamin) The B-Complex • All water soluble. • Form enzyme cofactors of central metabolism. • Readily available from foods in amounts required by average healthy adults. • Deficiencies can result from poor diet (e.g. B12 - vegans, B9 – too few veggies, B3 – historically, corn based diets) • Deficiencies can result from defective uptake (e.g. B12, B9). • Deficiencies can result from drug interactions (e.g. B6isoniazid). • There is a complex interplay with alcoholism, producing deficiencies (e.g. B1, B3). • Most studies suggest supplementation neither necessary nor useful for average adult; may be harmful. B1 Thiamine TDP Vitamer: thiamine Cofactor: thiamine diphosphate Adults require about 1.2 mg/day*. There is no set Tolerable Upper Intake Level (seems nontoxic at 50 mg/day). Body stores about 30 mg in tissues, including muscle. TPP is used by pyruvate, alpha-ketoglutarate, and branched chain ketoacid dehydrogenases (TLC For Nancy is mnemonic to recall that these enzymes need Thiamine, Lipoic acid, Coenzyme A, FAD, and NAD). FYI: In these dehydrogenases the TPP carbon between S and N ionizes and acts as a nucleophile to attack the ketone of the substrate. B2 Riboflavin Requirement about 1.2 mg/day for adults. Leaches out of body quite readily. Oral riboflavin is not toxic, and oral doses of up to 400 mg/day have been administered in studies. Riboflavin is used to make FMN and FAD, which are redox cofactors required for many enzymes, including glutathione reductase, a few cytp450 complexes, the electron transport system, several enzymes that interconvert forms of vitamin A, FH4, and niacin (from Tryptophan). FAD is the “F” in TLC For Nancy (see thiamine). B3: Niacin Niacin NAD+ For adults: 16mg/day (men) 14 mg/day (women). 35 mg/day is considered a tolerable upper intake limit*. Three ounces chicken or salmon has about 10 mg. One cup fortified cereal has about 25 mg. One cup cooked lentils has about 2 mg. One cup roast peanuts 20 mg. NOTE TO SELF: If you want to get niacin from veggies on right, you have to eat them, it is not sufficient just to buy them and put in produce drawer.** Niacin Therapy Hypercholesterolemia • Oral niacin in large doses (1-3 gram/day) has been shown to lower LDL and increase HDL cholesterol in otherwise untreated patients. Patients already taking a statin (now cheap, usually well-tolerated) do not seem to benefit. • Oral niacin in large doses commonly causes a visible “face flush” that can be uncomfortable, and can reduce patient compliance. B5 Pantothenic acid Adults 5 mg/day, abundant in many foods. No Tolerable Upper Limit established. Coenzyme A used to carry acyl chains in many parts of metabolism, particularly acetyl, malonyl, methylmalonyl, succinyl CoAs. B6 Pyridoxine Pyridoxine Pyridoxal Phosphate RDA about 1.5-2 mg/day. Tolerable Upper Limits vary between 25 (UK) and 100 (US) mg/day. Toxicity from supplemental B6 has been described. One of the vitamins sometimes used in legitimate “megavitamin therapy” to reverse problems arising from inherited defects in metabolic enzymes (see later). PLP is used in many enzymes of amino acid metabolism, forming an initial adduct with the amino nitrogen. Further catalysis involves aminotransferase, decarboxylation, (D/L)racemase, dehydration, or other sidechain chemistry. Glutamate decarboxylase (GABA) and kynureninase (Trp metabolism) are two sites sensitive to lower PLP Pyridoxal Reacts With Isoniazid Because of the ability of aldehydes to react with amines and their derivatives, the anti-tuberculosis drug isoniazid (dosage 300+ mg/day) can react with pyridoxal to form a derivative which is excreted. The reaction effectively removes pyridoxine from the body and causes a pyridoxine deficiency disorder in treated TB patients. It is standard to administer 25 mg/day of pyridoxine as a co-therapy with isoniazid to avoid this. B7 Biotin CO2 Carboxybiotin attached to E-Lys-NH Normally biotin is made by intestinal bacteria, and there is no RDA in USA. It can be tolerated in very high doses. However, egg white contains avidin, a protein that binds biotin, and consumption of raw egg white can result in a deficiency. Additionally, biotin needs to be attached to carboxylases by another enzyme, and defects cause deficiency-like symptoms. Biotin is the CO2-binding cofactor in many carboxylases, including acetyl CoA and pyruvate carboxylases. B9 Folic Acid Folic acid has three parts: a pteridine ring system (left), a para-aminobenzoate (PABA*) ring (middle), glutamate on right. The glutamate moiety is often polyglutamate: size of polyGlu can affect behavior and transport. Cofactor forms of FH4 (several) contain single carbon moieties (e.g. methyl, formyl, methylene) at the pteridine-PABA nitrogens. The Dietary reference Intake (DRI) for adults is 400 microgram/day, with upper limit of 1000 ug/day. There is little risk of toxicity. BUT: folate uptake is very complex and natural food folates and suppplement folates are taken up differentially. Folate = Foliage, Get it? Normal Child Needs Therapy FYI: Folate Complexity Folate Transport • Folate transport and metabolism are linked, complex, and still being actively studied. Rest of this is FYI • “PCFT” (Proton-Coupled Folate Transporter) is a folateproton symporter located in apical membrane of brush border cells in small intestine (along with lots of other carriers like Na-glucose and Na-amino acid). PCFT grabs folate in gut, taking up ONLY the monoglutamate form. A specific peptidase trims the polyglutamylated folates of the diet to monoglutamates. • A second transport system(s) probably takes folate from brush border cell across basolateral memebrane to blood. The same and other transporters take folate into liver and kidney for storage and use and other cells for use. • Within cells, folates can become polyglutamylated. This probably helps them stay within those cells. Kidney and liver can also hydrolyze polyglutamates to form monoglutamate. Folate Supplements and Chemotherapeutic Agents • Just to add to complexity of folate metabolism, the various folate transport systems have differing ability to carry folate, folate derivatives (e.g. methyl folate and formyl tetrahdrofolate) and chemotherapeutic mimics (e.g. methotrexate). • Effectively, this means that methotrexate may be transported differentially from folate. So, folinic acid (a monoglutamate form of formyl FH4) is often co-administered with methotrexate in a complex schedule. Methotrexate kills cancer cells, as folinic acid helps rescue normal cells. Much research remains to be done in this area! B12 Cobalamin B12 is used in two reactions in the human body. Homcysteine methylation requires methyl B12, whereas the methylmalonyl CoA mutase reaction requires the deoxyadenosyl form. Vitamer forms include hydroxy and cyano complexes. The US RDA is 2-3 micrograms/day. Daily losses are small, and large (mg) amounts are stored in liver, so deficiency takes years to materialize. Vitamin B12 • Where is it from? We usually say only “animal derived” foods. In fact B12 is not made by animals (or plants or yeast or other fungi) but only by some bacteria. Ruminant animals have B12producing bacterial symbionts in their upper gut, most animals have in lower gut. Feces contain B12 that is then ingested by the same or other animals. • Industrially, B12 is made in bacterial fermentation, which can be done in non-animal-using fashion. • No yeast makes B12. Some fungi and animals produce “pseudovitamin B12” which can score as B12 in some bacterialgrowth tests, but is not nutritive to animals. Pseudovitamin B12 can inhibit use of real B12. SOME “nutritional yeast” products contain supplemental B12, otherwise yeast DOES NOT contain usable B12. People need B12: they can get through animal products or a synthetic source. • Urinary methylmalonate is easy screening assay for poor B12 nutrition B12 Uptake: Complex! Vitamin E Tocopherol US Dietary Reference Intake for adults is 15 mg/day. An upper tolerable limit of 1000 mg/day. Rich sources are wheat germ oil, other oils, nuts and oily fruit (avocados) Vitamin E activity is shown by several compounds, including alpha-tocopherol (picture). Unlike other vitamins, E exerts its effects directly, not as a cofactor. Vitamin E is a lipid soluble membrane-incorporated scavenger of peroxyl radicals. It has other regulatory roles through binding to enzymes (e.g. protein kinase C) or altering transcription. Vitamin E deficiency from inadequate nutrition is rare, but can occur from fat malabsorption and rare genetic defects. Symptoms are neurological and include retinopathy, and vibratory sensation defects. Vitamin E Deficiency: Google Images So the guy peacefully sleeping is healthy and the woman has insomnia from vitamin E deficiency? NO! Apparently it’s the guy who has the vitamin E deficiency! Go figure! Attached text revealed that vitamin E deficiency could cause problems with the “reproductive apparatus”. Further info: Blazing Saddles. Vitamin K Gammacarboyglutamic acid. Side chain varies in length Vitamin K RDA for adults is about 100 micrograms/day. Half a cup of cooked kale has 531 micrograms. There is no known toxicity. The role of vitamin K is as a cofactor for a carboxylase that adds CO2 to certain glutamate residues of blood clotting proteins, such as thrombin (“Factor II”) and several others. The resultant residue (upper right) is gammacarboxyglutamate or Gla (in 3-letter code). Gla residues can bind Ca2+, and that role is essential for clotting factor function. Carboxylation is cotranslational. There are several drugs that interact with Vitamin K. Warfarin (Coumadin) is an anticlotting drug that inhibits vitamin K reactions, such that the prescribing physician and the patient must constantly balance the Coumadin/vitamin K intake. Since vitamin K is a natural and variable part of foods, this can be difficult. Additionally, vitamin K and Coumadin action are not instantaneous, like other clotting drugs: the clotting factors produced last for many days, and take days to replace, so there are delays between starting vitamin K therapy for Warfarin overdose, and getting a rebalanced clotting system. Deficiencies • We can think about vitamin deficiencies in terms of their incidence, in terms of the nature and severity of the symptoms, and the mechanism though which deficiency arises. How to Measure Vitamin Status • It is horrifying to realize that our ability to measure vitamin status clinically is often very poor. One also need to realize there are often both analytical assays that are more accurate, but slow and expensive, and screening assays that are quick but have many false positives and negatives. • Thiamine: there is a HPLC-based blood TDP assay. A blood thiamin assay inadequate to rule out WE/KS, activation of intracellular thiamine dependent enzymes better. • Niacin: measured as niacin metabolites in urine. Thiamine Deficiency: Wernicke’s Encephalopathy, Korsakoff Syndrome • A deficiency in brain B1 levels causes irreversible brain pathology (WE) and neurological deficits (KS). Symptoms can be arrested by thiamine therapy, usually by injection, but generally memory loss and neurological deficits are irreversible. • Usual cause is thiamine deprivation through alcoholism*, although also with eating disorders and occasionally bariatric surgery. There is only about 2-3 weeks worth of body thiamine, so deficiency can occur quickly. Niacin Deficiency: Pellagra • Pellagra is the term for pathological niacin deficiency. Historically, it arose in populations in which maize or sorghum was the major food. Corn contains niacin, but it is bound to corn fiber. Mesoamericans always ground corn with lime (CaCO3, “nixtamilization”), which frees niacin. Europeans began to use corn culture, but did not nixatamilize the corn, so it failed to provide niacin. The disorder was rampant in earlt 20th century USA, and worldwide in prison camps and other impoverished areas. Pellagra can arise among alcoholics from poor niacin content of diet, and lessened uptake. • Pellagra is characterized by the “4 Ds”: Dermatitis is striking and aggravated by sun. Diarrhea contributes to potentially fatal electrolyte imbalance and dehydration, Dementia arises through buildup of NAD precursors and lack of NAD/NADP. Death is a final outcome. • Niacin can be made from tryptophan, but synthesis is weak and inhibited by leucine. Poor B6 nutrition exacerbates the B6 effect. Folate Deficiency: Macrocytic Anemia • Active single carbon metabolism is required for human dTMP and purine synthesis, so poor folate nutrition results in a failure of red blood cell precursors to mature, and causes an anemia (low hematocrit) that is characterized by these large precursor cells. Readily reversed by folate in diet. • More insidiously, folate deficiency can cause failure of neural tube closure (extreme is spina bifida). The key period is in the early weeks of pregnancy, when the mother may not be fully cognizant of nutritional needs. Today USDA requires supplemental folate in flour and baked goods. B12 Deficiency: Irreversible Neurological Deficits • In the absence of sufficient B12, methylmalonate builds up and causes neurological problems, seen in gaiting and in cognitive deficits. The damage is stopped by B12, but is irreversible. • BUT: low B12 also results in trapping FH4 in its methyl form, causing a consequent folate deficiency anemia. This anemia is far easier to spot than the subtle neurological damage, and may result in misdiagnosis of folate deficiency. Folate supplementation will fix the anemia, but not the ongoing neurological issues. • Because the body stores mg quantities of B12, and sheds only ug quantities daily, B12 deficiency is very slow to show symptoms, so quite insidious. Who gets B12 Deficiency? • Inadequate nutrition: vegan diets do not contain B12. Synthetic B12 is a vegan product. It is a myth that “nutritional yeast” naturally contains B12, but some nutritional yeast is supplemented with B12: the label must say so and be quantitative • Inadequate uptake: older adults secrete far less intrinsic factor and can have adequate B12 in diet, but fail to take it up. These people will require supplementation, often by intramuscular injection. • For people with B12 deficiency, the initial injection schedule is daily, then less frequently. Aim is to build body stores, which goes slowly. Supplements • Americans use vitamin supplements! In general, neither useful nor harmful.* BUT, in specific cases can be valuable, and can definitely be toxic either directly, or in form taken. • B3 (niacin) – large doses in anti-cholesterol therapy (1-3 grams/day!), drug test duplicity can cause face flush, heart irregularities. Vitamins and Food Preparation • Some people are obsessive about vitamins. With a normal diet they probably do not need to be. BUT, these folks figure that while green veggies contain folic acid, cooking will destroy the vitamin. • Actual situation is more complex: for folate (example) raw green veggies often fail to release folate in digestive system. Cooking aids in release, although destroying some of the vitamin. • Key Point: cooked veggies are NOT devoid of B vitamins. What’s In Wheaties, Anyway? And Total? So idea here is to fill all your vitamin requirements by 8 a.m.? Except for A and D (note cautious content) most items here not particularly toxic. In cereal most of the vitamin content comes from added ingredients, not the cereal grain itself. Megavitamin Therapy • “Megavitamin” is used to describe two different things: a quackery approach to health, but also specific prescribed therapy to remediate an inherited or acquired inability of the cofactor to work correctly. These megavitamin-responsive disorders are rare, but there are many types. • In “gyrate atrophy of choroid and retina” ornithine aminotransferase has low activity, sometimes through weak binding of PLP. In those particular cases high oral B6 can cure this problem*. • There is oldish review** that lists 50 such disorders.