Glut-1 förklarar den evolutionära fördelen med förlusten av endogen C-vitaminsyntes
- 01Människor kan inte syntetisera eget C-vitamin
- 02En transportör (Glut-1) på röda blodkroppar transporterar in oxiderat C-vitamin
- 03Denna mekanism återvinner C-vitamin och gör användningen mycket effektiv
- 04Effektiviteten minskar vårt dagliga behov, en fördel vid ojämn tillgång på föda
En transportör i röda blodkroppar återvinner C-vitamin, vilket förklarar hur människor kan frodas med ett lägre dagligt intag än andra arter.
Introduction: During evolution, some species including humans, monkeys and fruit bats lost the ability for ascorbic acid (AA) biosynthesis due to inactivation of the enzyme l-gulono-lactone oxidase (GLO) and subsequently became dependent on dietary vitamin C. There are four current hypotheses in relation to the benefit of vitamin C dependence in the context of adaptation and reproduction. Here we advance and test a new 'electron transfer hypothesis', which focusses on the role of the expression of glucose transporter 1 (Glut-1) in red blood cells (RBCs) in recycling vitamin C, thereby increasing the efficiency of micronutrient uptake.
Methods: To evaluate the benefit of Glut-1 expression, we determined vitamin C uptake into RBCs and potential release from two different species, humans with l-Gulono-lactone-oxidase (GLO-loss) and pigs with functional GLO.
Results: The oxidized form of vitamin C (dehydroascorbate, DHA) was transported into human RBCs via Glut-1. There was no transport of either the reduced (AA) or the oxidized vitamin in pig erythrocytes.
Conclusion: We propose that the transport of vitamin C increases an intracellular electron pool, which transfers electrons from intracellular ascorbate to extracellular substances like ascorbyl free radical or DHA, resulting in 100-fold smaller daily requirement of this essential redox sensitive micronutrient. This would be an advantage during seasonal changes of the availability from food and may be the key for the survival of individuals without vitamin C biosynthesis.
Lay summary: 40 million years ago some individuals lost the ability to synthesize vitamin C. Why did they survive such as humans until now? Individuals with a specific glucose transporter Glut-1 on their erythrocytes which transports vitamin C need less and are protected from scarcity due to seasons and food competitors.
- APA
- Tabea C Hornung, & Hans-Konrad Biesalski (2019). Glut-1 förklarar den evolutionära fördelen med förlusten av endogen C-vitaminsyntes. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/glut-1-explains-the-evolutionary-advantage-of-the-loss-of-endogenous-vitamin-c-synthesis/
- MLA
- Tabea C Hornung, and Hans-Konrad Biesalski. "Glut-1 förklarar den evolutionära fördelen med förlusten av endogen C-vitaminsyntes." 2019, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/glut-1-explains-the-evolutionary-advantage-of-the-loss-of-endogenous-vitamin-c-synthesis/.
- Chicago
- Tabea C Hornung, Hans-Konrad Biesalski. 2019. "Glut-1 förklarar den evolutionära fördelen med förlusten av endogen C-vitaminsyntes.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/glut-1-explains-the-evolutionary-advantage-of-the-loss-of-endogenous-vitamin-c-synthesis/
