Down-Regulation Of Oxidative Dna Lesions In Human Mononuclear Cells After Antioxidant Supplementation Correlates To Increase Of Gamma-Tocopherol

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR VITAMIN AND NUTRITION RESEARCH(2008)

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Abstract
The protective effect of vitamin E supplements has been questioned, possibly because they often contain only alpha-tocopherol, and recent studies indicate that gamma-tocopherol also has important properties. The aim of this Study was to investigate whether the levels of DNA lesions in middle-aged, overweight males could be reduced by consumption of low doses of an antioxidant supplement for six weeks, designed to imitate a balanced diet. The participants (n = 60) were randomly divided into: placebo, single-, and double-dose groups. Genotoxic and oxidative DNA lesions in mononuclear cells were measured with the Comet assay, before and after supplement administration. Furthermore, a cell study was performed to investigate if pre-incubation of a human lung cell line (A549) with alpha- and gamma-tocopherol (5 and 50 mu M for 23 hours) could protect against induced oxidative DNA lesions as measured by the Cornet assay. The level of oxidative DNA lesions in the double-close group was significantly lower than in the control group. Oxidative DNA lesions correlated only to changes in serum gamma-tocopherol, and not alpha-tocopherol. In the cell study, only gamma-tocopherol protected cells against induced oxidative DNA lesions. We therefore hypothesize that gamma-tocopherol rather than alpha-tocopherol is involved in reducing oxidative DNA lesions.
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Key words
Tocopherol, vitamin E, oxidative stress, DNA damage, DNA lesions, antioxidant supplements, Comet assay
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