Literature DB >> 31821172

Vitamin E sequestration by liver fat in humans.

Pierre-Christian Violet1, Ifechukwude C Ebenuwa1, Yu Wang1, Mahtab Niyyati1, Sebastian J Padayatty1, Brian Head2, Kenneth Wilkins3, Stacey Chung4, Varsha Thakur4, Lynn Ulatowski4, Jeffrey Atkinson5, Mikel Ghelfi5, Sheila Smith1, Hongbin Tu1, Gerd Bobe2, Chia-Ying Liu6, David W Herion7, Robert D Shamburek8, Danny Manor4, Maret G Traber2, Mark Levine1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUNDWe hypothesized that obesity-associated hepatosteatosis is a pathophysiological chemical depot for fat-soluble vitamins and altered normal physiology. Using α-tocopherol (vitamin E) as a model vitamin, pharmacokinetics and kinetics principles were used to determine whether excess liver fat sequestered α-tocopherol in women with obesity-associated hepatosteatosis versus healthy controls.METHODSCustom-synthesized deuterated α-tocopherols (d3- and d6-α-tocopherols) were administered to hospitalized healthy women and women with hepatosteatosis under investigational new drug guidelines. Fluorescently labeled α-tocopherol was custom-synthesized for cell studies.RESULTSIn healthy subjects, 85% of intravenous d6-α-tocopherol disappeared from the circulation within 20 minutes but reappeared within minutes and peaked at 3-4 hours; d3- and d6-α-tocopherols localized to lipoproteins. Lipoprotein redistribution occurred only in vivo within 1 hour, indicating a key role of the liver in uptake and re-release. Compared with healthy subjects who received 2 mg, subjects with hepatosteatosis had similar d6-α-tocopherol entry rates into liver but reduced initial release rates (P < 0.001). Similarly, pharmacokinetics parameters were reduced in hepatosteatosis subjects, indicating reduced hepatic d6-α-tocopherol output. Reductions in kinetics and pharmacokinetics parameters in hepatosteatosis subjects who received 2 mg were echoed by similar reductions in healthy subjects when comparing 5- and 2-mg doses. In vitro, fluorescent-labeled α-tocopherol localized to lipid in fat-loaded hepatocytes, indicating sequestration.CONCLUSIONSThe unique role of the liver in vitamin E physiology is dysregulated by excess liver fat. Obesity-associated hepatosteatosis may produce unrecognized hepatic vitamin E sequestration, which might subsequently drive liver disease. Our findings raise the possibility that hepatosteatosis may similarly alter hepatic physiology of other fat-soluble vitamins.TRIAL REGISTRATIONClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00862433.FUNDINGNational Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and NIH grants DK053213-13, DK067494, and DK081761.

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Keywords:  Hepatology; Metabolism; Obesity

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Year:  2020        PMID: 31821172      PMCID: PMC7030816          DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.133309

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JCI Insight        ISSN: 2379-3708


  58 in total

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Authors:  Stacey Chung; Mikel Ghelfi; Jeffrey Atkinson; Robert Parker; Jinghui Qian; Cathleen Carlin; Danny Manor
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7.  Transport and distribution of alpha-tocopherol in lymph, serum and liver cells in rats.

Authors:  A Bjørneboe; G E Bjørneboe; E Bodd; B F Hagen; N Kveseth; C A Drevon
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9.  Vitamins C and E: acute interactive effects on biomarkers of antioxidant defence and oxidative stress.

Authors:  S W Choi; I F F Benzie; A R Collins; B M Hannigan; J J Strain
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2.  Associations Between Antioxidant Vitamin Status, Dietary Intake, and Retinol-binding Protein 4 Levels in Prepubertal Obese Children After 3-month Weight Loss Therapy

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Review 4.  Genetic Factors Associated with Response to Vitamin E Treatment in NAFLD.

Authors:  Mehtap Civelek; Maren C Podszun
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6.  Vitamin E treatment in NAFLD patients demonstrates that oxidative stress drives steatosis through upregulation of de-novo lipogenesis.

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