α-, γ- and δ-tocopherols reduce inflammatory angiogenesis in human microvascular endothelial cells☆
Autor: | Konstantinos A. Papas, Vicky Hadjivassiliou, Jonathon S. Alexander, Merilyn H. Jennings, Courtney Rome, Shannon R Wells |
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Rok vydání: | 2010 |
Předmět: |
Nutrition and Dietetics
Endothelium Angiogenesis Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism Vitamin E medicine.medical_treatment Clinical Biochemistry food and beverages Alpha (ethology) Biology Biochemistry Molecular biology Neovascularization Endothelial stem cell chemistry.chemical_compound medicine.anatomical_structure chemistry medicine lipids (amino acids peptides and proteins) heterocyclic compounds medicine.symptom VCAM-1 Cytotoxicity Molecular Biology |
Zdroj: | The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry. 21:589-597 |
ISSN: | 0955-2863 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jnutbio.2009.03.006 |
Popis: | Vitamin E, a micronutrient (comprising alpha-, beta-, gamma- and delta-tocopherols, alpha-, beta-, gamma- and delta-tocotrienols), has documented antioxidant and non-antioxidant effects, some of which inhibit inflammation and angiogenesis. We compared the abilities of alpha-, gamma- and delta-tocopherols to regulate human blood cytotoxicity (BEC) and lymphatic endothelial cytotoxicity (LEC), proliferation, invasiveness, permeability, capillary formation and suppression of TNF-alpha-induced VCAM-1 as in vitro models of inflammatory angiogenesis. alpha-, gamma- and delta-tocopherols were not toxic to either cell type up to 40 microM. In BEC, confluent cell density was decreased by all concentrations of delta- and gamma-tocopherol (10-40 microM) but not by alpha-tocopherol. LEC showed no change in cell density in response to tocopherols. delta-Tocopherol (40 microM), but not other isomers, decreased BEC invasiveness. In LEC, all doses of gamma-tocopherol, as well as the highest dose of alpha-tocopherol (40 microM), decreased cell invasiveness. delta-Tocopherol had no effect on LEC invasiveness at any molarity. delta-Tocopherol dose dependently increased cell permeability at 48 h in BEC and LEC; alpha- and gamma-tocopherols showed slight effects. Capillary tube formation was decreased by high dose (40 microM) concentrations of alpha-, gamma- and delta-tocopherol, but showed no effects with smaller doses (10-20 microM) in BEC. gamma-Tocopherol (10-20 microM) and alpha-tocopherol (10 microM), but not delta-tocopherol, increased LEC capillary tube formation. Lastly, in BEC, alpha-, gamma- and delta-tocopherol each dose-dependently reduced TNF-alpha-induced expression of VCAM-1. In LEC, there was no significant change to TNF-alpha-induced VCAM-1 expression with any concentration of alpha-, gamma- or delta-tocopherol. These data demonstrate that physiological levels (0-40 microM) of alpha-, gamma- and delta-tocopherols are nontoxic and dietary tocopherols, especially delta-tocopherol, can limit several BEC and LEC endothelial behaviors associated with angiogenesis. Tocopherols may therefore represent important nutrient-signals that limit cell behaviors related to inflammation/angiogenesis, which when deficient, may predispose individuals to risks associated with elevated angiogenesis such as inflammation and cancer; further differences seen from the tocopherols may be due to their blood or lymphatic cell origin. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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