Tissue distribution of alpha-tocopherol following dietary supplementation in the rat: effects of concomitant cholesterol feeding
1995
Konneh, M.K. | Rutherford, C. | Änggård, E. | Ferns, G.A.A.
Vitamin E is a potent, naturally occurring, lipid-soluble antioxidant, which is reported to be protective against several disease processes, including coronary atherosclerosis. We have measured the alpha-tocopherol content of the aorta, liver, skeletal muscle, and kidney of rats fed one of the following diets for 10 weeks: a normal control chow diet (i); or the same diet containing 1% cholesterol (ii); 0.5% vitamin E (iii); or 1% cholesterol plus 0.5% vitamin E (iv). The alpha-tocopherol content of serum and tissue extracts was measured by HPLC using gamma-tocopherol as an internal standard. Tissue and serum cholesterol content was measured using a cholesterol oxidase enzyme reagent kit. In all animals receiving the 1% cholesterol diet, serum cholesterol levels increased significantly (P< 0.005). By the 10th week, mean serum alpha-tocopherol levels rose significantly in both groups of animals receiving dietary vitamin E supplements (P <0.0001) compared with their respective control group. This was accompanied by a significant increase in the absolute alpha-tocopherol content of liver (8- to 9-fold) and aorta (3- to 4-fold). The alpha-tocopheroi content of renal and skeletal muscle tissue was raised 1- to 2-fold in both groups of rats on vitamin E supplements, however the increase attained significance only tor the renal tissue. The aortic tissue alpha-tocophero/cholesterol ratio was 4-fold higher in the rats receiving concomitant 1% cholesterol plus 0.5% vitamin E compared with animals receiving 1% cholesterol alone (P< 0.02), and was 5-fold higher in the rats receiving 0.5% vitamin E compared with those receiving control chow (P< 0.01). These data suggest that dietary vitamin E supplementation results in a differential uptake of alpha-tocopherol, which may be dependent, in part, on selective lipoprotein particle accumulation.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]