Islamabad, Dec 29 : It's rubbed on the skin to reduce signs of aging and consumed by
athletes to improve endurance but scientists now have the first evidence of one
of vitamin E's normal body functions.
The powerful antioxidant found in
most foods helps repair tears in the plasma membranes that protect cells from
outside forces and screen what enters and exits, Georgia Health Sciences
University researchers report in the journal Nature
Communications.
Everyday activities such as eating and exercise can tear
the plasma membrane and the new research shows that vitamin E is essential to
repair. Without repair of muscle cells, for example, muscles eventually waste
away and die in a process similar to what occurs in muscular dystrophy. Muscle
weakness also is a common complaint in diabetes, another condition associated
with inadequate plasma membrane repair.
"Without any special effort we
consume vitamin E every day and we don't even know what it does in our bodies,"
said Dr. Paul McNeil, GHSU cell biologist and the study's corresponding author.
He now feels confident about at least one of its jobs.
Century-old animal
studies linked vitamin E deficiency to muscle problems but how that happens
remained a mystery until now, McNeil said. His understanding that a lack of
membrane repair caused muscle wasting and death prompted McNeil to look at
vitamin E.
Vitamin E appears to aid repair in several ways. As an
antioxidant, it helps eliminate destructive byproducts from the body's use of
oxygen that impede repair. Because it's lipid-soluble, vitamin E can actually
insert itself into the membrane to prevent free radicals from attacking. It also
can help keep phospholipids, a major membrane component, compliant so they can
better repair after a tear.
For example, exercise causes the cell
powerhouse, the mitochondria, to burn a lot more oxygen than normal. "As an
unavoidable consequence you produce reactive oxygen species," McNeil said. The
physical force of exercise tears the membrane. Vitamin E enables adequate plasma
membrane repair despite the oxidant challenge and keeps the situation in
check.
When he mimicked what happens with exercise by using hydrogen
peroxide to produce free radicals, he found that tears in skeletal muscle cells
would not heal unless pretreated with vitamin E.
Next steps, which will
be aided by two recent National Institutes of Health grants, include examining
membrane repair in vitamin E-deficient animals.
McNeil also wants to
further examine membrane repair failure in diabetes. Former GHSU graduate
student Dr. Amber C. Howard showed in a recent paper in the journal Diabetes
that cells taken from animal models of types 1 and 2 diabetes have faulty repair
mechanisms.
Howard found high glucose was a culprit by soaking cells in
a high-glucose solution for eight to 12 weeks, during which time they developed
a repair defect. It's also well documented that reactive oxygen species levels
are elevated in diabetes.
The Nature Communications paper showed that
vitamin E treatment in an animal model of diabetes restored some membrane repair
ability. Also, an analogue of the most biologically active form of vitamin E
significantly reversed membrane repair deficits caused by high glucose and
increased cell survival after tearing cells in culture.
Now McNeil wants
to know if he can prevent the development of advanced glycation end products --
a sugar that high glucose adds to proteins that his lab has shown can also
impede membrane repair -- in the animal models of diabetes. The researchers have
a drug that at least in cultured animal cells, prevents repair defects from
advanced glycation end products.
Howard, first author on the Nature
Communications paper, is an instructor at Husson University in Bangor, Maine.
McNeil is a faculty member in GHSU's Medical College of Georgia and College of
Graduate Studies.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Scientists identify an innate function of vitamin E
Scientists identify an innate function of vitamin E
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