AI Article Synopsis

  • Mammals have two key enzymes, BCO1 and BCO2, that convert provitamin A (like β-carotene) into retinoids, which are essential for vitamin A production.
  • Disrupting the BCO1 enzyme leads to β-carotene buildup and vitamin A deficiency, whereas BCO2 contributes to generating a small amount of an alternative product, β-apo-10'-carotenol (APO10ol).
  • The research suggests a collaborative mechanism between BCO1 and BCO2 in the metabolism of carotenoids, highlighting their roles in maintaining retinoid levels from dietary sources.

Article Abstract

Mammalian genomes encode two provitamin A-converting enzymes as follows: the β-carotene-15,15'-oxygenase (BCO1) and the β-carotene-9',10'-oxygenase (BCO2). Symmetric cleavage by BCO1 yields retinoids (β-15'-apocarotenoids, C20), whereas eccentric cleavage by BCO2 produces long-chain (>C20) apocarotenoids. Here, we used genetic and biochemical approaches to clarify the contribution of these enzymes to provitamin A metabolism. We subjected wild type, Bco1(-/-), Bco2(-/-), and Bco1(-/-)Bco2(-/-) double knock-out mice to a controlled diet providing β-carotene as the sole source for apocarotenoid production. This study revealed that BCO1 is critical for retinoid homeostasis. Genetic disruption of BCO1 resulted in β-carotene accumulation and vitamin A deficiency accompanied by a BCO2-dependent production of minor amounts of β-apo-10'-carotenol (APO10ol). We found that APO10ol can be esterified and transported by the same proteins as vitamin A but with a lower affinity and slower reaction kinetics. In wild type mice, APO10ol was converted to retinoids by BCO1. We also show that a stepwise cleavage by BCO2 and BCO1 with APO10ol as an intermediate could provide a mechanism to tailor asymmetric carotenoids such as β-cryptoxanthin for vitamin A production. In conclusion, our study provides evidence that mammals employ both carotenoid oxygenases to synthesize retinoids from provitamin A carotenoids.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3837149PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.501049DOI Listing

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