| Literature DB >> 28335380 |
Kimbell R Duncan1, Yuichiro J Suzuki2.
Abstract
Vitamin E refers to a family of compounds that function as lipid-soluble antioxidants capable of preventing lipid peroxidation. Naturally occurring forms of vitamin E include tocopherols and tocotrienols. Vitamin E in dietary supplements and fortified foods is often an esterified form of α-tocopherol, the most common esters being acetate and succinate. The vitamin E esters are hydrolyzed and converted into free α-tocopherol prior to absorption in the intestinal tract. Because its functions are relevant to many chronic diseases, vitamin E has been extensively studied in respect to a variety of diseases as well as cosmetic applications. The forms of vitamin E most studied are natural α-tocopherol and the esters α-tocopheryl acetate and α-tocopheryl succinate. A small number of studies include or focus on another ester form, α-tocopheryl nicotinate, an ester of vitamin E and niacin. Some of these studies raise the possibility of differences in metabolism and in efficacy between vitamin E nicotinate and other forms of vitamin E. Recently, through metabolomics studies, we identified that α-tocopheryl nicotinate occurs endogenously in the heart and that its level is dramatically decreased in heart failure, indicating the possible biological importance of this vitamin E ester. Since knowledge about vitamin E nicotinate is not readily available in the literature, the purpose of this review is to summarize and evaluate published reports, specifically with respect to α-tocopheryl nicotinate with an emphasis on the differences from natural α-tocopherol or α-tocopheryl acetate.Entities:
Keywords: tocopherol nicotinate; tocopheryl nicotinate; vitamin E nicotinate
Year: 2017 PMID: 28335380 PMCID: PMC5384183 DOI: 10.3390/antiox6010020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1Chemical structures of niacin (nicotinic acid), α-tocopherol, and α-tocopheryl nicotinate.
Figure 2Levels of α-tocopheryl nicotinate in the heart of healthy control rats and rats with heart failure. Pulmonary arterial hypertension-induced right-sided heart failure was generated by administering ovalbumin and SU5416 to Sprague-Dawley rats [16]. Homogenates of right-heart ventricular tissues were injected into a reverse-phase column of an Acquity ultra-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) system. Mass spectrometry (MS) was performed using a quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometer. The box-and-whisker plot represents the levels of the metabolite corresponding to α-tocopheryl nicotinate (m/z 536.4077) in arbitrary units (a.u.). * denotes significant difference between each other at p < 0.05.
Figure 3Confirmation of the α-tocopheryl nicotinate peak. Results of metabolomics experiments using UPLC/MS were confirmed by time-of-flight/time-of-flight (TOF/TOF) tandem mass spectrometry. Both healthy control rat right-ventricle homogenate samples and α-tocopherol nicotinate (purchased from Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA) used as a standard exhibited the m/z peak at 536.410.
Reported Frequencies of Uses of Vitamin E Derivatives in Cosmetic Formulations [15].
| Ranking | Vitamin E Derivative | Frequency of Use |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tocopheryl acetate | 1322 |
| 2 | Tocopherol | 1072 |
| 3 | Tocopheryl linoleate | 279 |
| 4 | Potassium ascorbyl tocopheryl phosphate | 15 |
| 5 | Dioleyl tocopheryl methylsilanol | 12 |
| 6 | Tocopheryl succinate | 4 |
| 7 | Tocopheryl nicotinate | 3 |
| 8 | Tocophersolan | 2 |
Summary of the studies on α-tocopheryl nicotinate.
| Reference | Test | Object | Subjects | αTN Dose | Duration | Design | Control | Method | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Koyama & Araiso [ | Rheological properties | Erythrocytes | 7 healthy human patients | 400 mg/day | 1 month | Paired | Untreated baseline | Oral at mealtime | Decrease in membrane viscosity |
| Chung et al. [ | Retinal blood flow | Blood viscosity, composition | 7 female diabetes patients | 900 mg/day | 3 months | Paired | Untreated baseline | Oral at mealtime | Improved red blood cell deformity |
| Chung et al. [ | Rheological properties | Erythrocytes | 13 type II diabetic patients w/ retinopathy | 900 mg/day | 3 months | Paired | Untreated baseline | Oral at mealtime | Reduction in blood viscosity & red blood cell oxidation |
| Kamimura [ | Microcirculation | Mean rewarming time (MRT) | 36 microcirculatory deficiency patients | 400 mg/day | 2 weeks | Paired, cross administration | αTA & nicotinic acid | Oral at mealtime | αTN superior to αTA in reducing MRT |
| Kamimura [ | Microcirculation | Mean rewarming time (MRT) | 10 microcirculatory deficiency patients | 400 mg/day | 2 weeks | Paired, cross administration | αTA & nicotinic acid | Oral at mealtime | αTN superior to αTA in reducing MRT |
| Igarishi et al. [ | Hypertension | Blood pressure, animal weight | SHR and DOCA-salt hypertensive rats | 100 mg/kg/day | 4 weeks | Treated vs. controls | Gum arabic solution | Oral gavage once daily | Systolic blood pressure reduced by 15% compared to controls |
| Iino et al. [ | Hypertension | Subjective symptoms | 89 patients with hypertension or arteriosclerosis | 600 mg/day | 4–6 weeks | Treated vs. controls | Placebo | Oral at mealtime | Symptoms improved with αTN |
| Hidiroglou et al. [ | Cholesterol, HDL | Blood concentrations | 40 wether lambs | 300 mg/day | 8 weeks | Treated vs. controls | Placebo | Mixed with commercial diet | No significant effects on cholesterol or HDL levels |
| Higashi & Kikuchi [ | Platelet aggregation | Platelet-rich plasma | in vitro | 0.1–0.25 mM | 1 h | Treated vs. controls | αTA | 3uL in vitro | αTN superior to αTA in reducing hydrogen peroxide-induced platelet aggregation |
| Svensson & Oki [ | Platelet aggregation | Platelet-rich plasma | in vitro | 200 μg/mL | 2–3 h | treated vs. controls | α-Tocopherol and αTA | in Vitro bath | αTN 18x more potent than αT and 5x more potent than αTA at inhibiting platelet aggregation due to arachidonic acid |
| Noma et al. [ | Atherogenesis | Serum lipoprotein(a) | 28 Hyperlipidemic patients | 600 mg/day | 2 months | Paired | Untreated baseline | Oral at mealtime | Lipoprotein(a) concentrations declined significantly in patients with initial lipoprotein(a) concentrations >18 mg/dL |
| Schlieper & Tawfil [ | Arrhythmias | Inotropic action of glycosides | Guinea pigs atria | 100 μM | 1 h | Treated vs. controls | Ethanol, dodecanoic acid, α-tocopherol | in vitro bath | αTN more potent than α-tocopherol and dodecanoic acid in supressing inotropic effect of digoxin but not ouabain and also results in >90% decrease in arrhythmic activity of glycosides |
| Moriguchi & Itoh [ | Immune system | T-cell differentiation | Male Fischer rats | 585 mg/kg/day | 7 weeks | High vs. low αTN | Low-αTN diet rats | Mixed with commercial diet | Interleukin 2 production increased and PGE2 production decreased in thymocytes and CD4+ cells increased in rats fed high αTN diet |
| Inagaki et al. [ | Immune system | IgE antibody generation | Female BALB/c mice, male Wistar rats | 226 mg/kg food | 4 weeks | Treated vs. controls | Low vitamin E diets, αTA | Mixed with commercial diet | αTN more potent than αTA in suppressing IgE production and stimulating non-IgE antibody in antigen challenge studies |
| Tanaka et al. [ | Immune system | Humoral immune response | Female SL and DDD mice | 226 mg/kg food | 50 days | Treated vs. controls | Low vitamin E diets, αTA | Mixed with commercial diet | αTA diet more potent than αTN diet in enhancing humoral immune response to antigen challenge; neither αTA nor αTN produced a significant effect |
| Prasad et al. [ | Cancer | Melanoma cell | murine melanoma (B-16) and fibroblast (L-cells) cells | 1–100 μg/mL | 2 days | Treated vs. controls | Free alcohol, αTA, αTS | in vitro bath | αTS inhibiting melanoma cell proliferation; αTN and αTA not suppressing melanoma proliferation |
Abbreviations: αTN, α-tocopheryl nicotinate; αTA, α-tocopheryl acetate; αTS, α-tocopheryl succinate.