| Literature DB >> 19145213 |
Sutton Mooney1, Jan-Erik Leuendorf, Christopher Hendrickson, Hanjo Hellmann.
Abstract
In recent years vitamin B6 has become a focus of research describing the compound's critical function in cellular metabolism and stress response. For many years the sole function of vitamin B6 was considered to be that of an enzymatic cofactor. However, recently it became clear that it is also a potent antioxidant that effectively quenches reactive oxygen species and is thus of high importance for cellular well-being. In view of the recent findings, the current review takes a look back and summarizes the discovery of vitamin B6 and the elucidation of its structure and biosynthetic pathways. It provides a detailed overview on vitamin B6 both as a cofactor and a protective compound. Besides these general characteristics of the vitamin, the review also outlines the current literature on vitamin B6 derivatives and elaborates on recent findings that provide new insights into transport and catabolism of the compound and on its impact on human health.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19145213 PMCID: PMC6253932 DOI: 10.3390/molecules14010329
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Schematic drawing of de novo and salvage pathways.
Figure 2Bacterial catabolic pathways of vitB6. Roman numbers in parenthesis indicate enzymes: (I) pyridoxine 4-oxidase; (II) pyridoxal phosphatase; (III) pyridoxal 4-dehydrogenase; (IV) 4-pyridoxollactonase; (V) pyridoxol oxidase. Arabic numbers indicate compound: (1) PN; (2) PLP; (3) PL; (4) 4-pyridoxolactone; (5) 4-pyridoxic acid; (6) succinic semialdehyde (modified from [62]).
Examples of VitB6 De Novo and Salvage Pathway Mutants in Context with Stress.
| Organism | Mutant | Pathway affected | Phenotype | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reduced growth, aberrant shape | [ | |||
| Increased ROS sensitivity, loss of vitB6 production, increased salt sensitivity, reduced growth | [ | |||
| Reduced growth in minimal media | [ | |||
| Reduced growth in minimal media | [ | |||
| Increased ROS sensitivity | [ | |||
| Increased salt sensitivity | [ | |||
| Increased salt sensitivity | [ | |||
| Reduced aerial & root growth, increased salt sensitivity | [ |
Examples of VitB6 Vitamers and Their Derivatives
| Derivative | Structure | Function | Organism found | citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin B6 | Antioxidant | ubiquitous | [ | |
| Vitamin B6-phosphate | Cofactor | ubiquitous | [ | |
| 4’- | Unknown; potential inhibitor of PN/PM/PL kinase | [ | ||
| 5’- | Unknown | [ | ||
| Julibrine I | Unknown | [ | ||
| Julibrine II | Unknown; has been demonstrated to induce arrhythmia | [ | ||
| 5'-0-(β-D-Glucopyranosyl) pyridoxine | Unknown | Various plant products | [ | |
| Inhibitor of advanced glycation and lipoxidation reactions | PM treated diabetic and obese rats | [ | ||
| Inhibitor of advanced glycation and lipoxidation reactions | PM treated diabetic and obese rats | [ | ||
| Inhibitor of advanced glycation and lipoxidation reactions | PM treated diabetic and obese rats | [ | ||
| N-Formyl-pyridoxamine (FAPM) | Inhibitor of advanced glycation and lipoxidation reactions | PM treated diabetic and obese rats | [ |