Investigting the Cytoprotective Mechanisms of VIitamins B6 and B1 against Endogenous Toxin-induced Oxidative Stress

Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that many chronic health disorders in the developed world are associated with endogenous toxins formed from the Western diet. The Western diet, which encompasses calorie dense foods, processed foods and increased quantities of red meat, can cause intracellula...

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Main Author: Mehta, Rhea
Other Authors: O'Brien, Peter J.
Language:en_ca
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/31865
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-318652013-04-19T19:56:26ZInvestigting the Cytoprotective Mechanisms of VIitamins B6 and B1 against Endogenous Toxin-induced Oxidative StressMehta, RheaIsolated rat hepatocytesOxidative stressB vitamins0383Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that many chronic health disorders in the developed world are associated with endogenous toxins formed from the Western diet. The Western diet, which encompasses calorie dense foods, processed foods and increased quantities of red meat, can cause intracellular oxidative stress through increased formation of reactive oxygen species(ROS) and reactive carbonyl species (RCS). A number of micronutrients have been investigated for their protective capacity in in vitro and in vivo models of oxidative stress. This thesis investigated the cytotoxic targets of Fenton-mediated ROS and RCS and the subsequent protective mechanisms of vitamins B1 (thiamin) or B6 (pyridoxal, pyridoxamine or pyridoxine) in an isolated rat hepatocyte model. The approach was to use an “accelerated cytotoxicity mechanism screening” technique (ACMS) to develop an in vitro cell system that mimicked in vivo tissue cytotoxicity. Using this technique, we investigated the protective mechanisms of vitamins B1 and/or B6 against the cytotoxic effects of two endogenous toxins associated with the Western diet: 1) RCS, as exemplified by glyoxal, a glucose/fructose autoxidation product and 2) biological ROS induced by exogenous iron. Firstly, we developed an understanding of the sequence of events contributing to glyoxal-induced oxidative stress, with a focus on protein carbonylation. Next, we determined the mechanisms by which carbonyl scavenging drugs (vitamin B6 included) protected against the intracellular targets of glyoxal-induced toxicity. Our results suggested that the agents used were cytoprotective by multiple mechanisms and glyoxal trapping was only observed when the agents were administered at concentrations equal to glyoxal. We also evaluated the protective capacity of vitamins B1 and B6 against iron-catalyzed cytotoxicity and found that hepatocytes could be rescued from protein and DNA damage when vitamins B1 or B6 were added up to one hour after treatment with iron. The vitamins also varied in their primary mechanisms of protection. Our improved understanding of Western diet-derived endogenous toxins enabled us to identify and prioritize the specific inhibitory mechanisms of vitamins B1 or B6. The ability to delay, inhibit or reverse toxicity using multi-functional B1 or B6 vitamins could prove useful as therapy to minimize oxidative stress in diet-induced chronic conditions.O'Brien, Peter J.2011-112012-01-10T21:06:31ZNO_RESTRICTION2012-01-10T21:06:31Z2012-01-10Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/31865en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Isolated rat hepatocytes
Oxidative stress
B vitamins
0383
spellingShingle Isolated rat hepatocytes
Oxidative stress
B vitamins
0383
Mehta, Rhea
Investigting the Cytoprotective Mechanisms of VIitamins B6 and B1 against Endogenous Toxin-induced Oxidative Stress
description Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that many chronic health disorders in the developed world are associated with endogenous toxins formed from the Western diet. The Western diet, which encompasses calorie dense foods, processed foods and increased quantities of red meat, can cause intracellular oxidative stress through increased formation of reactive oxygen species(ROS) and reactive carbonyl species (RCS). A number of micronutrients have been investigated for their protective capacity in in vitro and in vivo models of oxidative stress. This thesis investigated the cytotoxic targets of Fenton-mediated ROS and RCS and the subsequent protective mechanisms of vitamins B1 (thiamin) or B6 (pyridoxal, pyridoxamine or pyridoxine) in an isolated rat hepatocyte model. The approach was to use an “accelerated cytotoxicity mechanism screening” technique (ACMS) to develop an in vitro cell system that mimicked in vivo tissue cytotoxicity. Using this technique, we investigated the protective mechanisms of vitamins B1 and/or B6 against the cytotoxic effects of two endogenous toxins associated with the Western diet: 1) RCS, as exemplified by glyoxal, a glucose/fructose autoxidation product and 2) biological ROS induced by exogenous iron. Firstly, we developed an understanding of the sequence of events contributing to glyoxal-induced oxidative stress, with a focus on protein carbonylation. Next, we determined the mechanisms by which carbonyl scavenging drugs (vitamin B6 included) protected against the intracellular targets of glyoxal-induced toxicity. Our results suggested that the agents used were cytoprotective by multiple mechanisms and glyoxal trapping was only observed when the agents were administered at concentrations equal to glyoxal. We also evaluated the protective capacity of vitamins B1 and B6 against iron-catalyzed cytotoxicity and found that hepatocytes could be rescued from protein and DNA damage when vitamins B1 or B6 were added up to one hour after treatment with iron. The vitamins also varied in their primary mechanisms of protection. Our improved understanding of Western diet-derived endogenous toxins enabled us to identify and prioritize the specific inhibitory mechanisms of vitamins B1 or B6. The ability to delay, inhibit or reverse toxicity using multi-functional B1 or B6 vitamins could prove useful as therapy to minimize oxidative stress in diet-induced chronic conditions.
author2 O'Brien, Peter J.
author_facet O'Brien, Peter J.
Mehta, Rhea
author Mehta, Rhea
author_sort Mehta, Rhea
title Investigting the Cytoprotective Mechanisms of VIitamins B6 and B1 against Endogenous Toxin-induced Oxidative Stress
title_short Investigting the Cytoprotective Mechanisms of VIitamins B6 and B1 against Endogenous Toxin-induced Oxidative Stress
title_full Investigting the Cytoprotective Mechanisms of VIitamins B6 and B1 against Endogenous Toxin-induced Oxidative Stress
title_fullStr Investigting the Cytoprotective Mechanisms of VIitamins B6 and B1 against Endogenous Toxin-induced Oxidative Stress
title_full_unstemmed Investigting the Cytoprotective Mechanisms of VIitamins B6 and B1 against Endogenous Toxin-induced Oxidative Stress
title_sort investigting the cytoprotective mechanisms of viitamins b6 and b1 against endogenous toxin-induced oxidative stress
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/31865
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