Dietary Marine-Derived Tocopherol has a Higher Biological Availability in Mice Relative to Alpha-Tocopherol

2009 
The biologic availability of two kinds of tocomonoenols, marine-derived tocopherol (MDT) and α-tocomonoenol, was investigated in ICR mice. Vitamin E-deficient ICR mice were fed MDT and α-tocomonoenol together with α-tocopherol, β-tocopherol, γ-tocopherol, and δ-tocopherol, and storage in liver, spleen, lung, and brain was quantified using reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. The vitamin E relative biologic availability (VE-RBA) in liver was 100 for α-tocopherol, 26 ± 3 for β-tocopherol, 4 ± 2 for γ-tocopherol, not detected for δ-tocopherol, 49 ± 6 for MDT, and 30 ± 7 for α-tocomonoenol. The VE-RBA in brain was 100 for α-tocopherol, 5 ± 2 for β-tocopherol, not detected for γ-tocopherol and δ-tocopherol, 8 ± 1 for MDT, and 4 ± 1 for α-tocomonoenol. Tocopherols and tocomonoenols did not accumulate in the spleen or lung. MDT and α-tocomonoenol had high VE-RBA values. The VE-RBA value for MDT was much higher than that for β-tocopherol.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    25
    References
    21
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []