Duality of Tocopherol Isoforms and Novel Associations with Vitamins Involved in One-Carbon Metabolism: Results from an Elderly Sample of the LifeLines Cohort Study

Author:

Sotomayor Camilo G.ORCID,Minović Isidor,Eggersdorfer Manfred L.,Riphagen Ineke J.,de Borst Martin H.ORCID,Dekker Louise H.,Nolte Ilja M.,Frank JanORCID,van Zon Sander K.R.,Reijneveld Sijmen A.ORCID,van der Molen Jan C.,Vos Michel J.,Kootstra-Ros Jenny E.,Rodrigo RamónORCID,Kema Ido P.,Navis Gerjan J.,Bakker Stephan J.L.ORCID

Abstract

Whether the affinity of serum vitamin E with total lipids hampers the appropriate assessment of its association with age-related risk factors has not been investigated in epidemiological studies. We aimed to compare linear regression-derived coefficients of the association of non-indexed and total lipids-indexed vitamin E isoforms with clinical and laboratory characteristics pertaining to the lipid, metabolic syndrome, and one-carbon metabolism biological domains. We studied 1429 elderly subjects (non-vitamin supplement users, 60–75 years old, with low and high socioeconomic status) from the population-based LifeLines Cohort and Biobank Study. We found that the associations of tocopherol isoforms with lipids were inverted in total lipids-indexed analyses, which may be indicative of overcorrection. Irrespective of the methods of standardization, we consistently found positive associations of α-tocopherol with vitamins of the one-carbon metabolism pathway and inverse associations with characteristics related to glucose metabolism. The associations of γ-tocopherol were often opposite to those of α-tocopherol. These data suggest that tocopherol isoforms and one-carbon metabolism are related, with beneficial and adverse associations for α-tocopherol and γ-tocopherol, respectively. Whether tocopherol isoforms, or their interplay, truly affect the one-carbon metabolism pathway remains to be further studied.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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