Retinol, also called vitamin A1, is a fat-soluble vitamin in the vitamin A family that is found in food and used as a dietary supplement.[3] Retinol or other forms of vitamin A are needed for vision, cellular development, maintenance of skin and mucous membranes, immune function and reproductive development.[3] Dietary sources include fish, dairy products, and meat.[3] As a supplement it is used to treat and prevent vitamin A deficiency, especially that which results in xerophthalmia.[1] It is taken by mouth or by injection into a muscle.[1] As an ingredient in skin-care products, it is used to reduce wrinkles and other effects of skin aging.[4]
Clinical data | |
---|---|
AHFS/Drugs.com | Monograph |
License data | |
Routes of administration | By mouth, intramuscular[1] |
Drug class | vitamin |
ATC code | |
Legal status | |
Legal status |
|
Identifiers | |
| |
CAS Number |
|
PubChem CID | |
IUPHAR/BPS | |
DrugBank | |
ChemSpider | |
UNII |
|
KEGG | |
ChEBI | |
ChEMBL | |
PDB ligand | |
CompTox Dashboard (EPA) | |
ECHA InfoCard | 100.000.621 |
Chemical and physical data | |
Formula | C20H30O |
Molar mass | 286.459 g·mol−1 |
3D model (JSmol) | |
Melting point | 62–64 °C (144–147 °F) |
Boiling point | 137–138 °C (279–280 °F) (10−6 mm Hg) |
Solubility in water | 0.000017[2] mg/mL (20 °C) |
| |
|
Retinol at normal doses is well tolerated.[1] High doses may cause enlargement of the liver, dry skin, and hypervitaminosis A.[1][5] High doses during pregnancy may harm the fetus.[1] The body converts retinol to retinal and retinoic acid, through which it acts.[3]
Retinol was discovered in 1909, isolated in 1931, and first made in 1947.[6][7] It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines.[8] Retinol is available as a generic medication and over the counter.[1] In 2021, vitamin A was the 298th most commonly prescribed medication in the United States, with more than 500,000 prescriptions.[9][10]
Medical uses
editRetinol is used to treat vitamin A deficiency.
Three approaches may be used when populations have low vitamin A levels:[11]
- Through dietary modification involving the adjustment of menu choices of affected persons from available food sources to optimize vitamin A content.
- Enriching commonly eaten and affordable foods with vitamin A, a process called fortification. It involves the addition of synthetic vitamin A to staple foods like margarine, bread, flour, cereals, and infant formula during processing.
- By giving high doses of vitamin A to the _targeted deficient population, a method known as supplementation. In regions where deficiency is common, a single large dose is recommended to those at high risk twice a year.[12]
Retinol is also used to reduce the risk of complications in measles patients.[12]
Side effects
editThe Recommended Daily Intake (RDA) for preformed supplemental vitamin A for adult men and women is 900 and 700 Retinol Activity Units(RAE)/day, respectively, or about 3,000 IU and 2,300 IU.[3] In pregnancy, the vitamin A RDA is 750–770 RAE/day (about 2,500–2,550 IU).[3] During lactation, the RDA increases to 1,200–1,300 RAE/day (about 4,000–4,300 IU, with differences depending on age).[3]
Retinol Activity Units can only be converted to IU (International Units) when the source of the vitamin A is known.[3] The IU values listed above do not apply to food sources of vitamin A.[3]
Too much vitamin A in retinoid form can be harmful. The body converts the dimerized form, carotene, into vitamin A as it is needed, so high levels of carotene are not toxic, whereas the ester (animal) forms are. The livers of certain animals, especially those adapted to polar environments, such as polar bears and seals,[13] often contain amounts of vitamin A that would be toxic to humans. Thus, vitamin A toxicity is typically reported in Arctic explorers and people taking large doses of synthetic vitamin A. The first documented death possibly caused by vitamin A poisoning was that of Xavier Mertz, a Swiss scientist, who died in January 1913 on an Antarctic expedition that had lost its food supplies and fell to eating its sled dogs. Mertz may have consumed lethal amounts of vitamin A by eating the dogs' livers.[14]
Vitamin A acute toxicity occurs when a person ingests vitamin A in large amounts more than the daily recommended value in the threshold of 25,000 IU/kg or more. Often, the patient consumes about 3–4 times the RDA's specification.[15] Toxicity of vitamin A is believed to be associated with the methods of increasing vitamin A in the body, such as food modification, fortification, and supplementation, all of which are used to combat vitamin A deficiency.[16] Toxicity is classified into two categories: acute and chronic. The former occurs a few hours or days after ingestion of a large amount of vitamin A. Chronic toxicity takes place when about 4,000 IU/kg or more of vitamin A is consumed for a long time. Symptoms of both include nausea, blurred vision, fatigue, weight loss, and menstrual abnormalities.[17]
Excess vitamin A is suspected to be a contributor to osteoporosis. This seems to happen at much lower doses than those required to induce acute intoxication. Only preformed vitamin A can cause these problems because the conversion of carotenoids or retinyl esters into vitamin A is downregulated when physiological requirements are met;[18] but excessive uptake of carotenoids can cause carotenosis.
Excess preformed vitamin A during early pregnancy is associated with a significant increase in birth defects.[19] These defects may be severe, even life-threatening. Even twice the daily recommended amount can cause severe birth defects.[20] The FDA recommends that pregnant women get their vitamin A from foods containing beta carotene and that they ensure that they consume no more than 5,000 IU of preformed vitamin A (if any) per day. Although vitamin A is necessary for fetal development, most women carry sufficient stores of vitamin A in their liver cells,[21] so over-supplementation should be strictly avoided.
A review of all randomized controlled trials in the scientific literature by the Cochrane Collaboration published in JAMA in 2007 found that supplementation with beta carotene or vitamin A increased mortality by 5% and 16%, respectively.[22] This effect has been attributed to the role of retinol and retinoic acid in increasing circulating cholesterol and triglycerides as well as promoting cancer incidence.[23]
Studies emerging from developing countries India, Bangladesh, and Indonesia strongly suggest that, in populations in which vitamin A deficiency is common and maternal mortality is high, dosing expectant mothers with retinol can greatly reduce maternal mortality.[24] Similarly, dosing newborn infants with 50,000 IU (15 mg) of vitamin A within two days of birth can significantly reduce neonatal mortality.[25][26]
Biological roles
editRetinol or other forms of vitamin A are needed for eyesight, maintenance of the skin, and human development.[1] Other than for vision, which requires 11-cis retinal, the active compound is retinoic acid, synthesized from retinal, in turn synthesized from retinol. The differing biological roles of retinoic acid depend on its stereochemistry and whether it is present in the all-trans, 9-cis, or 13-cis forms.[27]
Embryology
editRetinoic acid via the retinoic acid receptor influences the process of cell differentiation and, hence, the growth and development of embryos. During development, there is a concentration gradient of retinoic acid along the anterior-posterior (head-tail) axis. Cells in the embryo respond to retinoic acid differently depending on the amount present. For example, in vertebrates, the hindbrain transiently forms eight rhombomeres and each rhombomere has a specific pattern of genes being expressed. If retinoic acid is not present the last four rhombomeres do not develop. Instead, rhombomeres 1–4 grow to cover the same amount of space as all eight would normally occupy. Retinoic acid has its effects by turning on a differential pattern of Homeobox (Hox) genes that encode different homeodomain transcription factors which in turn can turn on cell type-specific genes.[28] Deletion of the Homeobox (Hox-1) gene from rhombomere 4 makes the neurons growing in that region behave like neurons from rhombomere 2. Retinoic acid is not required for patterning of the retina as originally proposed, but retinoic acid synthesized in the retina is secreted into the surrounding mesenchyme where it is required to prevent overgrowth of perioptic mesenchyme which can cause microphthalmia, defects in the cornea and eyelid, and rotation of the optic cup.[29]
Stem cell biology
editSynthetic retinoic acid is used in differentiation of stem cells to more committed fates, echoing retinoic acid's importance in natural embryonic developmental pathways. It is thought to initiate differentiation into several different cell lineages through activation of the Retinoic acid receptor. It has numerous applications in the experimental induction of stem cell differentiation; amongst these is the differentiation of human embryonic stem cells to posterior foregut lineages.[28]
Vision
editRetinol is an essential compound in the cycle of light-activated chemical reactions called the "visual cycle" that underlies vertebrate vision. Retinol is converted by the protein RPE65 within the pigment epithelium of the retina into 11-cis-retinal. This molecule is then transported into the retina's photoreceptor cells (the rod or cone cells in mammals) where it binds to an opsin protein and acts as a light-activated molecular switch. When 11-cis-retinal absorbs light it isomerizes into all-trans-retinal. The change in the shape of the molecule in turn changes the configuration of the opsin in a cascade that leads to the neuronal firing, which signals the detection of light.[30] The opsin then splits into the protein component (such metarhodopsin) and the cofactor all-trans-retinal. The regeneration of active opsin requires conversion of all-trans-retinal back to 11-cis-retinal via retinol. The regeneration of 11-cis-retinal occurs in vertebrates via the conversion of all-trans-retinol to 11-cis-retinol in a sequence of chemical transformations that occurs primarily in the pigment epithelial cells.[31]
Without adequate amounts of retinol, regeneration of rhodopsin is incomplete and night blindness occurs. Night blindness, the inability to see well in dim light, is associated with a deficiency of vitamin A, a class of compounds that includes retinol and retinal. In the early stages of vitamin A deficiency, the more light-sensitive and abundant rods, which have rhodopsin, have impaired sensitivity, and the cone cells are less affected. The cones are less abundant than rods and come in three types, each contains its own type of iodopsin, the opsins of the cones. The cones mediate color vision, and vision in bright light (day vision).
Glycoprotein synthesis
editGlycoprotein synthesis requires adequate vitamin A status. In severe vitamin A deficiency, lack of glycoproteins may lead to corneal ulcers or liquefaction.[32]
Immune system
editVitamin A is involved in maintaining a number of immune cell types from both the innate and acquired immune systems.[33] These include the lymphocytes (B-cells, T-cells, and natural killer cells), as well as many myelocytes (neutrophils, macrophages, and myeloid dendritic cells). Vitamin A maintains immune barriers in the gut through its activity as retinoic acid.[34]
Skin
editDeficiencies in vitamin A have been linked to an increased susceptibility to skin infection and inflammation.[35] Vitamin A appears to modulate the innate immune response and maintains homeostasis of epithelial tissues and mucosa through its metabolite, retinoic acid (RA). As part of the innate immune system, toll-like receptors in skin cells respond to pathogens and cell damage by inducing a pro-inflammatory immune response which includes increased RA production.[35] The epithelium of the skin encounters bacteria, fungi and viruses. Keratinocytes of the epidermal layer of the skin produce and secrete antimicrobial peptides (AMPs). Production of AMPs resistin and cathelicidin, are promoted by RA.[35] Another way that vitamin A helps maintain a healthy skin and hair follicle microbiome, especially on the face, is by reduction of sebum secretion, which is a nutrient source for bacteria.[35] Retinol has been the subject of clinical studies related to its ability to reduce the appearance of fine lines on the face and neck.[4][36]
Red blood cells
editVitamin A may be needed for normal red blood cell formation;[37][38] deficiency causes abnormalities in iron metabolism.[39] Vitamin A is needed to produce the red blood cells from stem cells through retinoid differentiation.[40]
Units of measurement
editWhen referring to dietary allowances or nutritional science, retinol is usually measured in international units (IU). IU refers to biological activity and therefore is unique to each individual compound, however, 1 IU of retinol is equivalent to approximately 0.3 micrograms (300 nanograms).
Nutrition
editVitamin properties | |
---|---|
Solubility | Fat |
RDA (adult male) | 900 μg/day |
RDA (adult female) | 700 μg/day |
RDA upper limit (adult male) | 3,000 μg/day |
RDA upper limit (adult female) | 3,000 μg/day |
Deficiency symptoms | |
| |
Excess symptoms | |
| |
Common sources | |
|
This vitamin plays an essential role in vision, particularly night vision, normal bone and tooth development, reproduction, and the health of skin and mucous membranes (the mucus-secreting layer that lines body regions such as the respiratory tract). While Vitamin A is often considered to be an antioxidant that prevents cancers, it does not have antioxidant activity[41] and is shown to promote the development of many cancers.[42][43]
There are two sources of dietary vitamin A. Retinyl ester or retinol forms, which are immediately available to the body or carotene precursors, also known as provitamins, which must be converted to active forms by the body. These are obtained from fruits and vegetables containing yellow, orange and dark green pigments, known as carotenoids, the most well-known being β-carotene.[44] For this reason, amounts of vitamin A are measured in Retinol Equivalents (RE). One RE is equivalent to 0.001 mg of retinol, or 0.006 mg of β-carotene, or 3.3 International Units of vitamin A.
Vitamin A is fat-soluble and is stored in the liver and fat tissue.[45] When required by a particular part of the body, the liver releases some vitamin A, which is carried by the blood and delivered to the _target cells and tissues.[46]
Dietary intake
editThe Dietary Reference Intake (DRI) Recommended Daily Amount (RDA) for vitamin A for a 25-year-old male is 900 micrograms/day, or 3000 IU. National Health Service daily recommended values are slightly lower at 700 micrograms for men and 600 micrograms for women.[47]
During the absorption process in the intestines, retinol is incorporated into chylomicrons as the ester form, and it is these particles that mediate transport to the liver. Liver cells store vitamin A as the ester, and when retinol is needed in other tissues, it is de-esterifed and released into the blood as the alcohol. Retinol then attaches to a serum carrier, retinol binding protein, for transport to _target tissues.[48] A binding protein inside cells, cellular retinoic acid binding protein, serves to store and move retinoic acid intracellularly.
Deficiency
editVitamin A deficiency is common in developing countries but rarely seen in developed countries. Approximately 250,000 to 500,000 malnourished children in the developing world go blind each year from a deficiency of vitamin A.[49] Vitamin A deficiency in expecting mothers increases the mortality rate of children shortly after childbirth.[50] Night blindness is one of the first signs of vitamin A deficiency. Vitamin A deficiency contributes to blindness by depleting the necessary form needed for rhodopsin.[31]
Sources
editRetinoids are found naturally only in foods of animal origin. Each of the following contains at least 0.15 mg of retinoids per 1.75–7 oz (50–198 g):
Chemistry
editMany different geometric isomers of retinol, retinal and retinoic acid are possible as a result of either a trans or cis configuration of four of the five double bonds found in the polyene chain. The cis isomers are less stable and can readily convert to the all-trans configuration (as seen in the structure of all-trans-retinol shown at the top of this page). Nevertheless, some cis isomers are found naturally and carry out essential functions. For example, the 11-cis-retinal isomer is the chromophore of rhodopsin, the vertebrate photoreceptor molecule. Rhodopsin is composed of the 11-cis-retinal covalently linked via a Schiff base to the opsin protein (either rod opsin or blue, red, or green cone opsins). The process of vision relies on the light-induced isomerisation of the chromophore from 11-cis to all-trans resulting in a change of the conformation and activation of the photoreceptor molecule.[31]
Many of the non-visual functions of vitamin A are mediated by retinoic acid, which regulates gene expression by activating nuclear retinoic acid receptors.[29] The non-visual functions of vitamin A are essential in the immunological function, reproduction, and embryonic development of vertebrates as evidenced by the impaired growth, susceptibility to infection, and birth defects observed in populations receiving suboptimal vitamin A in their diet.
Synthesis
editBiosynthesis
editRetinol is synthesized from the breakdown of β-carotene. First, the β-carotene 15,15'-monooxygenase cleaves β-carotene at the central double bond, creating an epoxide. This epoxide is then attacked by water creating two hydroxyl groups in the center of the structure. The cleavage occurs when these alcohols are oxidized to the aldehydes using NADH. This compound is called retinal. Retinal is then reduced to retinol by the enzyme retinol dehydrogenase. Retinol dehydrogenase is an enzyme that is dependent on NADH.[52]
Industrial synthesis
editRetinol is made industrially via total synthesis using either a method developed by BASF[53][54] or a Grignard reaction utilized by Hoffman-La Roche.[55] The two major suppliers, DSM and BASF, are believed to use total synthesis.[56]
The world market for synthetic retinol is primarily for animal feed, leaving approximately 13% for a combination of food, prescription medication, and dietary supplement use.[56] The first industrialized synthesis of retinol was achieved by the company Hoffmann-La Roche in 1947. In the following decades, eight other companies developed their own processes. β-ionone, synthesized from acetone, is the essential starting point for all industrial syntheses. Each process involves elongating the unsaturated carbon chain.[56] Pure retinol is extremely sensitive to oxidization and is prepared and transported at low temperatures and oxygen-free atmospheres. When prepared as a dietary supplement or food additive, retinol is stabilized as the ester derivatives retinyl acetate or retinyl palmitate. Before 1999, three companies, Roche, BASF, and Rhone-Poulenc controlled 96% of global vitamin A sales. In 2001, the European Commission imposed total fines of 855.22 Euros on these and five other companies for their participation in eight distinct market-sharing and price-fixing cartels that dated back to 1989. Roche sold its vitamin division to DSM in 2003. DSM and BASF have the major share of industrial production.[56]
History
editIn 1912, Frederick Gowland Hopkins demonstrated that unknown accessory factors found in milk, other than carbohydrates, proteins, and fats were necessary for growth in rats. Hopkins received a Nobel Prize for this discovery in 1929.[57] One year later, Elmer McCollum, a biochemist at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and colleague Marguerite Davis identified a fat-soluble nutrient in butterfat and cod liver oil. Their work confirmed that of Thomas Burr Osborne and Lafayette Mendel, at Yale, also in 1913, which suggested a fat-soluble nutrient in butterfat.[58] The "accessory factors" were termed "fat-soluble" in 1918 and later "vitamin A" in 1920. In 1931, Swiss chemist Paul Karrer described the chemical structure of vitamin A.[57] Retinoic acid and retinol were first synthesized in 1946 and 1947 by two Dutch chemists, David Adriaan van Dorp and Jozef Ferdinand Arens.[59][60]
In 1967, George Wald was a co-recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine "..."for their discoveries concerning the primary physiological and chemical visual processes in the eye."[61] Photoreceptor cells in the eye contain a chromophore composed of the protein opsin and 11-cis retinal. When struck by light, 11-cis retinal undergoes photoisomerization to all-trans retinal and via signal transduction cascade sends a nerve signal to the brain. The all-trans retinal is reduced to all-trans retinol and travels back to the retinal pigment epithelium to be recycled to 11-cis retinal and conjugated to opsin.[62]
Although vitamin A was not confirmed as an essential nutrient and a chemical structure described until the 20th century, written observations of conditions created by deficiency of this nutrient appeared much earlier in history. Sommer classified historical accounts related to vitamin A and/or manifestations of deficiency as follows: "ancient" accounts; 18th- to 19th-century clinical descriptions (and their purported etiologic associations); early 20th-century laboratory animal experiments, and clinical and epidemiologic observations that identified the existence of this unique nutrient and manifestations of its deficiency.[24]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h "Vitamin A". Drugs.com, The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists. 12 December 2024. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
- ^ Bonrath W, Gao B, Houston P, McClymont T, Müller MA, Schäfer C, et al. (September 2023). "75 Years of Vitamin A Production: A Historical and Scientific Overview of the Development of New Methodologies in Chemistry, Formulation, and Biotechnology". Organic Process Research & Development. 27 (9): 1557–84. doi:10.1021/acs.oprd.3c00161. ISSN 1083-6160.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Vitamin A: Fact Sheet for Health Professionals". Office of Dietary Supplements, National Institutes of Health. 15 December 2023. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
- ^ a b Kong R, Cui Y, Fisher GJ, Wang X, Chen Y, Schneider LM, et al. (March 2016). "A comparative study of the effects of retinol and retinoic acid on histological, molecular, and clinical properties of human skin". Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology. 15 (1): 49–57. doi:10.1111/jocd.12193. PMID 26578346. S2CID 13391046.
- ^ British national formulary : BNF 69 (69 ed.). British Medical Association. 2015. p. 701. ISBN 9780857111562.
- ^ Squires VR (2011). The Role of Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries in Human Nutrition. Vol. IV. EOLSS Publications. p. 121. ISBN 9781848261952. Archived from the original on 5 November 2017.
- ^ Ullmann's Food and Feed, 3 Volume Set. John Wiley & Sons. 2016. p. Chapter 2. ISBN 9783527695522. Archived from the original on 5 November 2017.
- ^ World Health Organization (2023). The selection and use of essential medicines 2023: web annex A: World Health Organization model list of essential medicines: 23rd list (2023). Geneva: World Health Organization. hdl:10665/371090. WHO/MHP/HPS/EML/2023.02.
- ^ "The Top 300 of 2021". ClinCalc. Archived from the original on 15 January 2024. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
- ^ "Vitamin A - Drug Usage Statistics". ClinCalc. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
- ^ Schultink W (September 2002). "Use of under-five mortality rate as an indicator for vitamin A deficiency in a population". The Journal of Nutrition. 132 (9 Suppl): 2881S–2883S. doi:10.1093/jn/132.9.2881S. PMID 12221264.
- ^ a b World Health Organization (2009). Stuart MC, Kouimtzi M, Hill SR (eds.). WHO Model Formulary 2008. World Health Organization. p. 500. hdl:10665/44053. ISBN 9789241547659.
- ^ Rodahl K, Moore T (July 1943). "The vitamin A content and toxicity of bear and seal liver". The Biochemical Journal. 37 (2): 166–168. doi:10.1042/bj0370166. PMC 1257872. PMID 16747610.
- ^ Nataraja A. "Man's best friend? (An account of Mertz's illness)". Archived from the original on 29 January 2007.
- ^ Gropper SS, Smith JL, Groff JL (2009). Advanced Nutrition and Human Metabolism (5th ed.). pp. 373–1182.
- ^ Thompson J, Manore M (2005). "Ch. 8: Nutrients involved in antioxidant function". Nutrition: An Applied Approach. Pearson Education Inc. pp. 276–283.
- ^ Mohsen SE, Mckinney K, Shanti MS (2008). "Vitamin A toxicity". Medscape. Archived from the original on 23 July 2013.
- ^ Steinhoff JS, Wagner C, Dähnhardt HE, Košić K, Meng Y, Taschler U, et al. (July 2024). "Adipocyte HSL is required for maintaining circulating vitamin A and RBP4 levels during fasting". EMBO Reports. 25 (7): 2878–2895. doi:10.1038/s44319-024-00158-x. PMC 11239848. PMID 38769419.
- ^ Challem J (1995). "Caution Urged With Vitamin A in Pregnancy: But Beta-Carotene is Safe". The Nutrition Reporter Newsletter. Archived from the original on 1 September 2004.
- ^ Stone B (6 October 1995). "Vitamin A and Birth Defects". United States FDA. Archived from the original on 4 February 2004.
- ^ Steinhoff JS, Wagner C, Dähnhardt HE, Košić K, Meng Y, Taschler U, et al. (July 2024). "Adipocyte HSL is required for maintaining circulating vitamin A and RBP4 levels during fasting". EMBO Reports. 25 (7): 2878–2895. doi:10.1038/s44319-024-00158-x. PMC 11239848. PMID 38769419.
- ^ Bjelakovic G, Nikolova D, Gluud LL, Simonetti RG, Gluud C (February 2007). "Mortality in randomized trials of antioxidant supplements for primary and secondary prevention: systematic review and meta-analysis" (PDF). JAMA. 297 (8): 842–857. doi:10.1001/jama.297.8.842. PMID 17327526. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 February 2016.
- ^ Esposito M, Amory JK, Kang Y (September 2024). "The pathogenic role of retinoid nuclear receptor signaling in cancer and metabolic syndromes". The Journal of Experimental Medicine. 221 (9). doi:10.1084/jem.20240519. PMC 11318670. PMID 39133222.
- ^ a b Sommer A (October 2008). "Vitamin a deficiency and clinical disease: an historical overview". The Journal of Nutrition. 138 (10): 1835–1839. doi:10.1093/jn/138.10.1835. PMID 18806089.
- ^ Tielsch JM, Rahmathullah L, Thulasiraj RD, Katz J, Coles C, Sheeladevi S, et al. (November 2007). "Newborn vitamin A dosing reduces the case fatality but not incidence of common childhood morbidities in South India". The Journal of Nutrition. 137 (11): 2470–2474. doi:10.1093/jn/137.11.2470. PMID 17951487.
- ^ Klemm RD, Labrique AB, Christian P, Rashid M, Shamim AA, Katz J, et al. (July 2008). "Newborn vitamin A supplementation reduced infant mortality in rural Bangladesh". Pediatrics. 122 (1): e242–e250. doi:10.1542/peds.2007-3448. PMID 18595969. S2CID 27427577.
- ^ Esposito M, Amory JK, Kang Y (September 2024). "The pathogenic role of retinoid nuclear receptor signaling in cancer and metabolic syndromes". The Journal of Experimental Medicine. 221 (9). doi:10.1084/jem.20240519. PMC 11318670. PMID 39133222.
- ^ a b Duester G (September 2008). "Retinoic acid synthesis and signaling during early organogenesis". Cell. 134 (6): 921–931. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2008.09.002. PMC 2632951. PMID 18805086.
- ^ a b Duester G (September 2008). "Retinoic acid synthesis and signaling during early organogenesis". Cell. 134 (6): 921–931. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2008.09.002. PMC 2632951. PMID 18805086.
- ^ Purves D, Augustine GJ, Fitzpatrick D, Katz LC, LaMantia AS, McNamara JO, et al. (2001). "Phototransduction". Neuroscience (2nd ed.). Sinauer Associates.
- ^ a b c Sahu B, Maeda A (November 2016). "Retinol Dehydrogenases Regulate Vitamin A Metabolism for Visual Function". Nutrients. 8 (11): 746. doi:10.3390/nu8110746. PMC 5133129. PMID 27879662.
- ^ Starck T (1997). "Severe Corneal Ulcerations and Vitamin A Deficiency". Advances in Corneal Research. Springer, Boston, MA. p. 558. doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-5389-2_46. ISBN 978-1-4613-7460-2.
- ^ "Vitamin A directs immune cells to intestines". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
- ^ Mucida D, Park Y, Kim G, Turovskaya O, Scott I, Kronenberg M, et al. (July 2007). "Reciprocal TH17 and regulatory T cell differentiation mediated by retinoic acid". Science. 317 (5835): 256–260. doi:10.1126/science.1145697. PMID 17569825.
- ^ a b c d Roche FC, Harris-Tryon TA (January 2021). "Illuminating the Role of Vitamin A in Skin Innate Immunity and the Skin Microbiome: A Narrative Review". Nutrients. 13 (2): 302. doi:10.3390/nu13020302. PMC 7909803. PMID 33494277.
- ^ "Vitamin A and Skin Health". Linus Pauling Institute. 7 November 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2023.
- ^ Oren T, Sher JA, Evans T (November 2003). "Hematopoiesis and retinoids: development and disease". Leukemia & Lymphoma. 44 (11): 1881–1891. doi:10.1080/1042819031000116661. PMID 14738139. S2CID 11348076.
- ^ Evans T (September 2005). "Regulation of hematopoiesis by retinoid signaling". Experimental Hematology. 33 (9): 1055–1061. doi:10.1016/j.exphem.2005.06.007. PMID 16140154.
- ^ García-Casal MN, Layrisse M, Solano L, Barón MA, Arguello F, Llovera D, et al. (March 1998). "Vitamin A and beta-carotene can improve nonheme iron absorption from rice, wheat and corn by humans". The Journal of Nutrition. 128 (3): 646–650. doi:10.1093/jn/128.3.646. PMID 9482776.
- ^ "Carotenoid Oxygenase". InterPro. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
- ^ Blaner WS, Shmarakov IO, Traber MG (October 2021). "Vitamin A and Vitamin E: Will the Real Antioxidant Please Stand Up?". Annual Review of Nutrition. 41: 105–131. doi:10.1146/annurev-nutr-082018-124228. PMID 34115520.
- ^ Alpha-Tocopherol BC (April 1994). "The effect of vitamin E and beta carotene on the incidence of lung cancer and other cancers in male smokers". The New England Journal of Medicine. 330 (15): 1029–1035. doi:10.1056/NEJM199404143301501. PMID 8127329.
- ^ Goodman GE, Thornquist MD, Balmes J, Cullen MR, Meyskens FL, Omenn GS, et al. (December 2004). "The Beta-Carotene and Retinol Efficacy Trial: incidence of lung cancer and cardiovascular disease mortality during 6-year follow-up after stopping beta-carotene and retinol supplements". Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 96 (23): 1743–1750. doi:10.1093/jnci/djh320. PMID 15572756.
- ^ Burri BJ, Clifford AJ (October 2004). "Carotenoid and retinoid metabolism: insights from isotope studies". Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics. Highlight issue on Carotenoids. 430 (1): 110–119. doi:10.1016/j.abb.2004.04.028. PMID 15325918.
- ^ Steinhoff JS, Wagner C, Dähnhardt HE, Košić K, Meng Y, Taschler U, et al. (July 2024). "Adipocyte HSL is required for maintaining circulating vitamin A and RBP4 levels during fasting". EMBO Reports. 25 (7): 2878–2895. doi:10.1038/s44319-024-00158-x. PMC 11239848. PMID 38769419.
- ^ Amengual J, Zhang N, Kemerer M, Maeda T, Palczewski K, Von Lintig J (October 2014). "STRA6 is critical for cellular vitamin A uptake and homeostasis". Human Molecular Genetics. 23 (20): 5402–5417. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddu258. PMC 4168826. PMID 24852372.
- ^ "Vitamins and minerals - Vitamin A". nhs.uk. 23 October 2017. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
- ^ Amengual J, Zhang N, Kemerer M, Maeda T, Palczewski K, Von Lintig J (October 2014). "STRA6 is critical for cellular vitamin A uptake and homeostasis". Human Molecular Genetics. 23 (20): 5402–5417. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddu258. PMC 4168826. PMID 24852372.
- ^ "Micronutrient deficiencies - Vitamin A deficiency". World Health Organization. 18 April 2018. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ Akhtar S, Ahmed A, Randhawa MA, Atukorala S, Arlappa N, Ismail T, et al. (December 2013). "Prevalence of vitamin A deficiency in South Asia: causes, outcomes, and possible remedies". Journal of Health, Population, and Nutrition. 31 (4): 413–423. doi:10.3329/jhpn.v31i4.19975. PMC 3905635. PMID 24592582.
- ^ Brown JE (2002). Vitamins and Your Health. Nutrition Now (3rd ed.). pp. 1–20.
- ^ Dewick PM (2009). Medicinal Natural Products. Wiley. ISBN 978-0470741672.
- ^ DE 954247, Wittig G, Pommer H, "Verfahren zur Herstellung von best-Carotin bzw. 15,15'-Dehydro-beta-carotin", issued 13 December 1956.
- ^ US 2917524, Wittig G, Pommer H, "Compounds of the vitamin A series", issued 1959, assigned to Badische Anilin- & Soda-Fabrik Akt.-Ges.
- ^ US 2609396, Herloff IH, Horst P, "Compounds with the carbon skeleton of beta-carotene and process for the manufacture thereof", published 2 September 1952.
- ^ a b c d Parker GL, Smith LK, Baxendale IR (February 2016). "Development of the industrial synthesis of vitamin A". Tetrahedron. 72 (13): 1645–52. doi:10.1016/j.tet.2016.02.029.
- ^ a b Semba RD (2012). "On the 'discovery' of vitamin A". Annals of Nutrition & Metabolism. 61 (3): 192–198. doi:10.1159/000343124. PMID 23183288. S2CID 27542506.
- ^ Semba RD (April 1999). "Vitamin A as "anti-infective" therapy, 1920-1940". The Journal of Nutrition. 129 (4): 783–791. doi:10.1093/jn/129.4.783. PMID 10203551.
- ^ Arens JF, Van Dorp DA (February 1946). "Synthesis of some compounds possessing vitamin A activity". Nature. 157 (3981): 190–191. Bibcode:1946Natur.157..190A. doi:10.1038/157190a0. PMID 21015124. S2CID 27157783.
- ^ Van Dorp DA, Arens JF (August 1947). "Synthesis of vitamin A aldehyde". Nature. 159 (4058): 189. Bibcode:1947Natur.160..189V. doi:10.1038/160189a0. PMID 20256189. S2CID 4137483.
- ^ "The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1967". Nobel Foundation. Archived from the original on 4 December 2013. Retrieved 28 July 2007.
- ^ Ebrey T, Koutalos Y (January 2001). "Vertebrate photoreceptors". Progress in Retinal and Eye Research. 20 (1): 49–94. doi:10.1016/S1350-9462(00)00014-8. PMID 11070368. S2CID 2789591.
External links
edit- Jane Higdon, "Vitamin A", Micronutrient Information Center, Linus Pauling Institute, Oregon State University
- NIH Office of Dietary Supplements – Vitamin A
- Vitamin A Deficiency at the Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy