Vitamin E protection against chemical-induced cell injury. II. Evidence for a threshold effect of cellular alpha-tocopherol in prevention of adriamycin toxicity

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Published on Tuesday, 02 October 2018

Abstract

The cardiomyopathy produced by the widely used anticancer drug adriamycin (ADR) is believed to be related to the production of reaction oxygen species and consumption of reduced glutathione (GSH) during redox cycling of the drug.

Protection by vitamin E against the toxicity of ADR was studied in a model of compromised isolated hepatocytes, generated by physiological alterations in the concentration of cell calcium.

A decrease in cell calcium concentration leads to a greater loss of endogenous alpha-tocopherol and enhances the intracellular hydrolysis of exogenous alpha-tocopheryl esters. With this model, vitamin E (alpha-tocopheryl succinate) at 25 microM protected the calcium-depleted hepatocytes against the toxicity of ADR, in association with greater cellular alpha-tocopherol content as compared to calcium-adequate cells. The incubation of calcium-adequate hepatocytes with increasing concentrations of alpha-tocopheryl succinate up to 200 microM demonstrated that maximal protection by vitamin E was directly dependent on the alpha-tocopherol content of the cells, regardless of the concentration of cell calcium.

The viability of the cells was closely associated with the alpha-tocopherol-mediated maintenance of cellular protein thiols. Viability and protein thiol content of the cells were maximal at cellular alpha-tocopherol levels in the range 0.6-1.0 nmol/10(6) cells in both calcium-depleted and -adequate cells.

It is suggested that the potential use of vitamin E as a protective agent against ADR toxicity in vivo be reevaluated with an emphasis placed on the threshold level of intracellular alpha-tocopherol in the critical target tissue.

 



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See also:

- Official Web Site: The Di Bella Method;


 


- The Di Bella Method (A Fixed Part - Alpha tocopheryl acetate/Vitamin E, approximately 20 grams per day orally);

- Cancer and Vitamin E (analogues and/or derivatives) and cancer - In vitro, review and in vivo publications;

- Solution of retinoids in vitamin E in the Di Bella Method biological multitherapy;

- The Di Bella Method (A Fixed Part - All-Trans Retinoic Acid, Analogues and/or Derivatives - Approximately 60mg per day orally: 40mg per day Beta-Carotene/β-Carotene, 10mg per day ATRA and 10mg per day Axerophthol palmitate);

- All-Trans-Retinoic Acid (ATRA - analogues and/or derivatives) - In vitro, review and in vivo publications;

- The Di Bella Method (A Fixed Part - Calcium, 2 grams per day, orally);

- The Di Bella Method (A Fixed Part - Cyclophosphamide 50mg tablets and/or Hydroxyurea 500mg tablets, one or two per day);


 


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