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Vitamin A. Retin oids Precursors of vitamin A 1 - Retin o l It is found in animal tissues as a retinyl ester with long-chain fatty acids. 2 - Retin a l The aldhyde derived from the oxidation of retinol. Retinol and retinal can be interconverted . 3 - Retin oic acid
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Retinoids Precursors of vitamin A 1- Retinol It is found in animal tissues as a retinyl ester with long-chain fatty acids. 2- Retinal The aldhyde derived from the oxidation of retinol. Retinol and retinal can be interconverted. 3- Retinoicacid The acidderived from retinal. It can not be reduced in the body, and therefore, can not give rise to either retinal or retinol 4-b-carotene Plantfoods contain b-carotene, which can be cleaved in the intestine to two moleculesofretinal In humans, the conversion is insufficient, and vitamin A activity of b-carotene is only about one sixth(1/6) of that of retinol
Retinol (Animal Source) Retinalb-carotene (Plant Source) Retinoic Acid RETINOIDS PRECURSOR OF VITAMIN A
Absorption & Transport of vitamin A Transport to the Liver I- Retinol is derived from (DIET SOURCES) 1-DIET Retinyl esters (animal source) which are hydrolyzed in the intestinal mucosa, releasing retinoland free fatty acids 2- DIET b-carotenes(plant source) which is cleaved 2 retinalretinol II- Retinol is esterified with fatty acids to give retinylesters III-Retinyl esters are collected by the chylomicronsinto the lymphatic system. IV- Retinyl esters contained in the chylomicrons are taken up and stored by the liver
Release from the Liver • When needed, retinol is released from the liver and transported to extra hepatic tissue by plasmaretinol binding protein(RBP) • Theretinol - RBP complex attaches to specific receptors on the surface of the cells of peripheral tissues permitting retinol to enter
Mechanism of Action of vitamin A • Retinolis oxidized to retinoic acidinside cells. • Retinoic acidbinds with high-affinity to specific receptor proteins present in the nucleus of target tissue, such as epithelial cell. • The activated retinoic acid - receptor complexinteracts with nuclear chromatin (genes) to stimulate retinoid-specific mRNAsynthesis, resulting in the production of specific proteins that mediate several physiological functions. e.g. retinoids control the expression of keratin gene in most epithelial tissues.
Physiological Functions of Vitamin A • Vision • Growth • Reproduction • Epithelial cell maintenance
Functions of Vitamin A 1-Vision • Vitamin A is a component of the visual pigments of rodand cone cells. • Rhodopsin, the visual pigment of the rod cells in the retina, (for vision in dim light) consists of 11-cis retinal specially bound to the protein opsin. • When rhodopsin is exposed to light, a series of photochemical isomerization occurs, which results in release of all trans retinal and opsin (with bleaching of the visual pigment). • This process triggers a nerve impulse that is transmitted by the optic nerve to the brain. • Regeneration of rhodopsin requires isomerization of all trans retinal back to 11-cis retinal, which spontaneously combines with opsin to form rhodopsin.
2- Growth • Vitamin A is essential for normal growth of cells (by synthesis of important proteins) • bone growth is slow in vitamin A deficiency. • Animals deprived of vitamin A suffers keratinzation of taste buds leading to losing of their appetites.
3-Reproduction • Retinol & retinalare essential for normal reproduction 1- supporting spermatogenesis in males 2- preventing fetal resorption in females • Retinoic acid is inactivein maintaining reproduction & the visual cycle, BUT promotes growth. Thus, retinoic acids given only since birth to animals, leads to blindness & sterility. 4-Epithelial cells maintenance • Vitamin A is essential for normal differentiation of epithelial tissues and mucus secretion.
Diet Sources of Vitamin A • Sources of retinol(retinyl esters) : animal source Liver, kidney, cream, butter & egg yolk • Sources of carotenes(precursors of vitamin A) : plant source Yellow & dark green vegetables & fruits Requirement for Vitamin A • OneRE(retinol equivalents) = 1mg of retinol 12mg of b-carotene 24mg of other carotenoids • RDA for adults 900 RE for males 700RE for females
Clinical indications of vitamin A 1-Dietary deficiency Vitamin A, administered asretinolor retinyl esters, is used to treat patients deficient in the vitamin (not retinoic acid) Night blindness One of the earliest signs of vitamin A deficiency Difficulty in seeing in dim light. Prolonged deficiency leads to irreversible loss of visual cell. (affection of rods of retina) Xerophthalmia Severe deficiency of vitamin A Pathological dryness of the epithelium conjunctiva & cornea. It may end in corneal ulcerations and blindness.
2-Acne & Psoriasis Dermatologicproblemsofacne andpsoriasis are effectively treated with retinoic acidor its derivatives. • Mild cases of acneis treated by topical application of tretinoin (All- trans retinoic acid) which is too toxic for systemic administration. • Severe recalcitrant cystic acneunresponsive to conventional therapies, isotretinoin(13-cis retinoic acid) is administered orally
3-Prevention of chronic diseases • Populations consuming diets high in b-carotene show decreased incidence of heart diseases & lung & skin cancer • Consumption of foods rich in b-carotene is associated with reduced risk of cataracts and macular degeneration
Toxicity of Retinoids I. Vitamin A excess(hypervitaminosis A syndrome) Amounts exceeding 7.5 mg/day of retinol 1-Excessive intake of vitamin A may cause the followings: • dry skin & pruiritis are early signs • liver enlarged, cirrhotic • increased intracranial pressure (mimic symptoms of brain tumours e.g. headache etc…) 2-Pregnant females should not ingest excessive amounts of vitamin A because of its potential for causing congenital malformations in developing fetus.
II. Isotretinoin drug(13-cis retinoic acid) 1-Teratogenic • So, absolutely contraindicated in women with childbearing potential. • Pregnancy should be excluded before initiation of treatment & adequate contraceptive (birth control) must be used 2-Risk of coronary heart diseases Prolonged treatment with 13-cis retinoic acid leads to hyperlipidemia & increase in LDL/HDL ratio with increased risk of coronary heart diseases.