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Hepatic processing determines dual activity of α-tocopheryl succinate: a novel paradigm for a shift in biological activity due to pro-vitamin-to-vitamin conversion (2005)

Abstract
Redox-silent vitamin E analogues, represented by α-tocopheryl succinate, are potent anti-cancer drugs with potential secondary bioactivity due to their processing in vivo. Here we verified the hypothesis that hepatic processing of these agents determines the secondary effect. Mice were repeatedly injected with α-tocopheryl succinate, and their systemic and hepatic vein blood was assessed for α-tocopheryl succinate and its hydrolysis product, vitamin E (α-tocopherol). While levels of α-tocopherol doubled compared to control mice and α-tocopheryl succinate accumulated in the systemic blood, no α-tocopheryl succinate was detected in blood draining the liver. We conclude that hepatic processing endows compounds like α-tocopheryl succinate with a secondary, anti-oxidant/anti-inflammatory activity due to converting it to the redox-active α-tocopherol. Our finding epitomises a novel, general paradigm, according to which a drug can be converted in the liver into a product that has a different beneficial bioactivity.

Publication details
Download http://hdl.handle.net/10072/4745
Publisher http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2004.12.115
Academic Press, United States, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0006291X
Repository ARROW Discovery Service (Australia)
Keywords health studies, 320307, Griffith Health and Medical Research, heart, Molecular Basis of Disease, PRE2009-Medical Biochemistry: Other
Type journal article, journal article
Language English
Relation Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1024, 1027, N, 327