‘Gifted'
Form of Vitamin E protects Brain against
Stroke
Newswise, July 11, 2011 — A natural form of
vitamin E called alpha-tocotrienol can
trigger production of a protein in the brain
that clears toxins from nerve cells,
preventing those cells from dying after a
stroke, new research shows.
This process is one of three mechanisms
identified so far that this form of vitamin
E uses to protect brain cells after a
stroke, meaning that this natural substance
might be more potent than drugs targeting
single mechanisms for preventing stroke
damage, according to Ohio State University
scientists who have studied the nutrient for
more than a decade.
These researchers previously reported that
the tocotrienol form of vitamin E protects
the brain after a stroke by blocking an
enzyme from releasing toxic fatty acids and
inhibiting activity of a gene that can lead
to neuron death.
Vitamin E occurs naturally in eight
different forms, and all of this work is
focused on the tocotrienol form, also known
as TCT. The commonly known form of vitamin E
belongs to a variety called tocopherols. TCT
is not abundant in the American diet but is
available as a nutritional supplement. It is
a common component of a typical Southeast
Asian diet.
In this new study, the researchers first
clarified the role of a protein called MRP1,
or multidrug resistance-associated protein
1. This protein clears away a compound that
can cause toxicity and cell death when it
builds up in neurons as a result of the
trauma of blocked blood flow associated with
a stroke.
They then determined that TCT taken orally
influences production of this protein by
elevating the activity of genes that make
MRP1. This appears to occur at the microRNA
level; a microRNA is a small segment of RNA
that influences a gene’s protein-building
function.
“This is one of the first studies to provide
evidence that a safe nutrient – a vitamin –
can alter microRNA biology to produce a
favorable disease outcome,” said Chandan Sen,
professor and vice chair for research in
Ohio State’s Department of Surgery and
senior author of the study. “Here, a natural
nutritional product is simultaneously acting
on multiple targets to help prevent
stroke-induced brain damage. That is a
gifted molecule.”
The research appears online and is scheduled
for later print publication in the journal Stroke.
Over the past decade, Sen has led numerous
studies on how the TCT form of vitamin E
protects the brain against stroke damage in
animal and cell models, and intends to
eventually pursue tests of its potential to
both prevent and treat strokes in humans.
Approximately 795,000 Americans suffer new
or recurrent strokes each year, and stroke
is the third-leading cause of death in the
United States, according to the American
Stroke Association.
These latest research findings in mice
follow a recent Food and Drug Administration
certification of TCT as “Generally
Recognized as Safe.” The scientists conclude
in the paper that even before clinical
trials can take place, “TCT may be
considered as a preventive nutritional
countermeasure for people at high risk for
stroke.”
To determine the role of MRP1 in protecting
brain cells, the researchers compared the
effects of an induced stroke in two groups
of mice: normal mice and animals that were
genetically modified to be deficient in the
MRP1 protein.
Both groups of mice showed comparably
decreased blood flow in the area of the
stroke, but the mice deficient in MRP1 had a
larger volume of tissue death than did
normal mice.
The mice with the protein deficiency also
had a 1.6-fold higher level of a toxin that
is cleared by MRP1. This toxin is called
GSSG, or glutathione disulfide, and these
researchers have previously shown that a
failure to clear this toxin appears to
trigger neuron death in the brain after
stroke.
“The protein has the effect of dredging out
the toxin,” said Sen, who is also a deputy
director of Ohio State’s Davis Heart and
Lung Research Institute. “A significant
finding in this work is the recognition that
MRP1 is a protective factor against stroke.
Thanks to tocotrienol, we were able to
identify that path.”
The presence of GSSG is linked to an
excessive amount of glutamate that is
released in the brain after a stroke.
Glutamate is a neurotransmitter that, in
tiny amounts, has important roles in
learning and memory. Too much of it triggers
a sequence of reactions that lead to the
death of brain cells – the most damaging
effects of a stroke.
This experiment showed for the first time
that the loss of MRP1 function impairs the
clearance of GSSG, and that MRP1 cells were
recruited to the site of the stroke in
normal mice, indicating this protein has a
protective role in the brain after a stroke.
The researchers searched databases
containing genomic data for a microRNA that
appeared to have potential to influence
production of MRP1. MicroRNAs bind to
messenger RNA, which contains the actual set
of instructions for building proteins. When
that connection is made, however, the
microRNA inhibits the building of protein
from messenger RNA. So an inverse
relationship exists between a microRNA and a
protein it controls.
The researchers saw this very relationship
in the cell study in which they manipulated
the candidate microRNA levels and observed
the effects of changing those levels on the
presence of the MRP1 protein.
Finally, the researchers compared mice that
were treated with TCT supplements or corn
oil as a control for 13 weeks before a
stroke was induced. The amount of damaged
brain tissue was smaller in the mice that
received TCT supplementation than in the
mice receiving corn oil. In addition, TCT
supplementation was associated with a lower
level of the candidate microRNA in the
damaged brain tissue, as well as an increase
in the abundance of MRP1 cells at the stroke
site.
“Essentially what we are showing with
mechanistic explanation is that tocotrienol
protects neural cells. It is
anti-neurodegenerative,” Sen said. “This
form of vitamin E helped us identify three
major checkpoints in stroke-related
neurodegeneration that were not known before
we began testing tocotrienols against
neurodegeneration”
This research was supported by the National
Institutes of Health.