| Literature DB >> 27511941 |
Michael H Green1, Jennifer Lynn Ford1, Anthony Oxley2, Joanne Balmer Green1, Hyunjin Park2, Philip Berry3, Alan V Boddy3, Georg Lietz4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Model-based compartmental analysis of data on plasma retinol kinetics after administration of labeled retinol provides unique information about whole-body vitamin A metabolism. If labeled β-carotene is coadministered, its bioefficacy relative to the retinol reference dose can also be estimated.Entities:
Keywords: WinSAAM; area under the curve; bioconversion; bioefficacy; carotenoids; humans; isotope dilution; retinoids; retinol kinetics; vitamin A deficiency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27511941 PMCID: PMC5037873 DOI: 10.3945/jn.116.233486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr ISSN: 0022-3166 Impact factor: 4.798
FIGURE 1Proposed compartmental model for retinol kinetics in humans. Circles represent compartments; components 3 and 13, shown as rectangles, are delay elements, and interconnectivities between compartments [L(I,J)s] are fractional transfer coefficients or the fraction of retinol in compartment J that is transferred to compartment I each day. Panel A shows the model for [13C10]retinol and panel B shows the parallel model for [13C5]retinol (which was derived from the [13C10]β-carotene dose). In panel A, compartments 1–4 (including component 3) correspond to vitamin A digestion and absorption, loss of unabsorbed vitamin A, chylomicron production and metabolism, hepatocyte uptake of chylomicron remnant retinyl esters, and hepatic processing of retinol. Compartment 5 represents plasma retinol bound to retinol-binding protein and transthyretin; this retinol exchanges with vitamin A in 1 extravascular pool (compartment 6), which includes vitamin A stores in liver and other organs; thus, the fractional transfer of retinol to compartment 6 (stores) from compartment 5 (plasma) is L(6,5) (d−1) and the fractional transfer of retinol back to plasma from stores is L(5,6) (d−1). The asterisks (*) represent the site of input of the orally administered [13C] stable isotopes, and U(1) represents dietary vitamin A input. Absorption efficiency was fixed at 75%; thus, the fraction of the dose not absorbed is L(0,1) = 0.333 × L(2,1) because 25% is one-third of 75%. L(5,2) [and L(15,12) in the parallel model] represents the possibility that some retinol may be absorbed via the portal vein or picked up from the surface of chylomicrons; this parameter was required to fit the first data point. In panel B, compartments 11 and 12 represent β-carotene digestion and absorption; compartment 12 corresponds to the bioconversion of absorbed β-carotene to retinol in enterocytes. The remaining parts of the model are the same as in panel A, with L(16,15) = L(6,5), L(15,16) = L(5,6), and L(20,16) = L(10,6). L(I,J), fractional transfer coefficient. Adapted from reference 4 with permission.
Baseline characteristics, dietary intake, and fasting plasma concentrations in healthy young adults of European ancestry
| Values | |
| Subject characteristics | |
| Age, y | 24.5 ± 4.0 |
| Weight, kg | 65.2 ± 10.0 |
| BMI, kg/m2 | 22.5 ± 1.9 |
| Fat, % | 20.9 ± 8.1 |
| Dietary intake | |
| Energy, kcal/d | 2480 ± 698 |
| Carbohydrate, g/d | 307 ± 99.6 |
| Fat, g/d | 89.3 ± 32.5 |
| Protein, g/d | 94.9 ± 32.7 |
| β-Carotene, μg/d | 4610 ± 4460 |
| Retinol, μg/d | 461 ± 501 |
| Plasma | |
| β-Carotene, μmol/L | 0.55 ± 0.33 |
| Retinol, μmol/L | 1.53 ± 0.27 |
| TGs, mmol/L | 0.91 ± 0.37 |
| Cholesterol, mmol/L | 4.91 ± 0.91 |
Values are means ± SDs, n = 13 men and n = 17 women.
FIGURE 2Model-predicted fractions of dose for [13C10]- and [13C5]retinol over time. Observed data (symbols) and model-predicted fraction of dose (lines) for [13C10]retinol (derived from the ingested [13C10]retinyl acetate dose) and for [13C5]retinol (derived from the ingested [13C10]β-carotene dose) compared with time in 1 representative healthy young-adult subject. Also indicated are times at which individual kinetic parameters are most sensitive to the data. The model is shown in Figure 1. DT(3), delay time in component 3.
Model-predicted parameters for retinol kinetics in healthy young adults of European ancestry
| Parameter | Value |
| L(2,1) | 24.2 ± 39.0 |
| L(5,2) | 0.114 ± 0.191 |
| DT(3) | 0.113 ± 0.0442 |
| L(5,4) | 2.98 ± 5.18 |
| L(6,5) | 5.50 ± 2.11 |
| L(5,6) | 0.169 ± 0.108 |
| L(10,6) | 0.0599 ± 0.0231 |
| L(15,12) | 0.110 ± 0.205 |
| DT(13) | 0.152 ± 0.0327 |
| L(15,14) | 1.43 ± 0.872 |
| P(11) | 10.9 ± 5.54 |
Values are means ± SDs, n = 30. Parameters are fractional transfer coefficients [L(I,J)] or the fraction of retinol in compartment J that is transferred to compartment I each day. For example, L(6,5) is the fractional transfer of retinol to compartment 6 (stores) from compartment 5 (plasma) (d−1) and L(5,6) is the fractional transfer of retinol back to plasma from stores (d−1). L(0,11), the fraction of the oral dose of β-carotene that was not absorbed, was calculated as P(11) × L(12,11), where P(11) is a constant. L(0,1) = 0.333 × L(2,1), L(16,15) = L(6, 5), L(15,16) = L(5,6), L(20,16) = L(10,6), and L(2,1) = L(3,2) = L(12,11) = L(13,12). The model is shown in Figure 1. DT(3) and DT(13), delay times in components 3 and 13, respectively.
FIGURE 3Fractions of dose in plasma [13C10]retinol (derived from ingested [13C10]retinyl acetate) and [13C5]retinol (derived from the ingested dose of [13C10]β-carotene) vs. time for the subject with the highest (A) and lowest (B) β-carotene bioconversion efficiency. Symbols correspond to observed data and lines correspond to model simulations; the model is shown in Figure 1.
FIGURE 4β-Carotene bioefficacy calculated in WinSAAM (model-based AUC method; http://www.WinSAAM.org) compared with KaleidaGraph (graphical AUC method; Synergy Software) for 30 subjects. Bioefficacy estimates were not significantly different (P = 0.23). The least-squares regression line (y = 0.531 + 0.992x) indicates a positive linear relation (r = 0.95, P < 0.001). AUC, area under the plasma isotope response curve.