Vitamin B12

Vitamin B12
Systematic (IUPAC) name
α-(5,6-dimethylbenzimidazolyl)cobamidcyanide
Clinical data
AHFS/Drugs.com monograph
Routes of
administration
oral, IV, IM, intranasal
Legal status
Legal status
  • UK: POM (Prescription only)
  • US: OTC
Pharmacokinetic data
Bioavailability Readily absorbed in distal half of the ileum
Protein binding Very high to specific transcobalamins plasma proteins
Binding of hydroxocobalamin is slightly higher than cyanocobalamin.
Metabolism hepatic
Biological half-life Approximately 6 days
(400 days in the liver)
Excretion Renal
Identifiers
CAS Number 68-19-9 YesY
ATC code B03BA01 (WHO)
PubChem CID 5479203
DrugBank DB00115 N
ChemSpider 10469504 YesY
KEGG D00166 YesY
ChEMBL CHEMBL2110563 N
Chemical data
Formula C63H88CoN14O14P
Molar mass 1355.37 g/mol
 NYesY (what is this?)  (verify)
Methylcobalamin (shown) is a form of vitamin B12. Physically it resembles the other forms of vitamin B12, occurring as dark red crystals that freely form cherry-colored transparent solutions in water.

Vitamin B12, vitamin B12 or vitamin B-12, also called cobalamin, is a water-soluble vitamin that has a key role in the normal functioning of the brain and nervous system, and the formation of red blood cells. It is one of eight B vitamins. It is involved in the metabolism of every cell of the human body, especially affecting DNA synthesis, fatty acid and amino acid metabolism.[1] No fungi, plants, nor animals (including humans) are capable of producing vitamin B12. Only bacteria and archaea have the enzymes needed for its synthesis. Some plant foods are a natural source of B12 because of bacterial symbiosis. B12 is the largest and most structurally complicated vitamin and can be produced industrially only through a bacterial fermentation-synthesis. This synthetic B12 is used to fortify foods and sold as a dietary supplement.

Vitamin B12 consists of a class of chemically related compounds (vitamers), all of which show pharmacological activity. It contains the biochemically rare element cobalt (chemical symbol Co) positioned in the center of a planar tetra-pyrrole ring called a corrin ring. The vitamer is produced by bacteria as hydroxocobalamin, but conversion between different forms of the vitamin occurs in the body after consumption.

A common synthetic form of the vitamin is cyanocobalamin, produced by chemically modifying bacterial hydroxocobalamin. Because of superior stability and low cost this form is used in many pharmaceuticals and supplements as well as for fortification of foods. In the body it is converted into the human physiological forms methylcobalamin and 5'-deoxyadenosylcobalamin. In this process a cyanide ion, (CN), is produced, but the amount is very, very small (20 μg from 1,000 μg of cyanocobalamin) compared to what would cause a toxicity risk, and is in fact less than the amount of cyanide consumed daily from food (primarily fruit, nuts, seeds, and legumes). Cyanide-free synthetic forms of the vitamin—hydroxocobalamin, methylcobalamin, and adenosylcobalamin—are being used in some pharmacological products and supplements, but their claimed superiority to cyanocobalamin is debatable.

Vitamin B12 was discovered from its relationship to the disease pernicious anemia, an autoimmune disease in which parietal cells of the stomach responsible for secreting intrinsic factor are destroyed; these cells are also responsible for secreting acid in the stomach. Because intrinsic factor is crucial for the normal absorption of B12, its lack in the presence of pernicious anemia causes a vitamin B12 deficiency. Many other subtler kinds of vitamin B12 deficiency and their biochemical effects have since been elucidated.[2]

Terminology

So-called pseudovitamin-B12 refers to B12-like analogues that are biologically inactive in humans and yet found to be present alongside B12 in humans,[3][4] many food sources (including animals[5]), and possibly supplements and fortified foods.[6][7] In most cyanobacteria, including Spirulina, and some algae, such as dried Asakusa-nori (Porphyra tenera), pseudovitamin-B12 is found to predominate.[8][9]

Medical uses

Vitamin B12 is used to treat vitamin B12 deficiency, cyanide poisoning, and hereditary deficiency of transcobalamin II.[10] It is given as part of the Schilling test for detecting pernicious anemia.[10]

For cyanide poisoning, a large amount of hydroxocobalamin may be given intravenously and sometimes in combination with sodium thiosulfate.[11] The mechanism of action is straightforward: the hydroxycobalamin hydroxide ligand is displaced by the toxic cyanide ion, and the resulting harmless B12 complex is excreted in urine. In the United States, the Food and Drug Administration approved (in 2006) the use of hydroxocobalamin for acute treatment of cyanide poisoning.[12]

High vitamin B12 level in elderly individuals may protect against brain atrophy or shrinkage associated with Alzheimer's disease and impaired cognitive function.[13]

Dietary Reference Intake

The Food and Nutrition Board of the U.S. Institute of Medicine updated Estimated Average Requirements (EARs) and Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDAs) for vitamin B12 in 1998. The current EAR for vitamin B12 for women and men ages 14 and up is 2.0 μg/day; the RDA is 2.4 μg/day. RDAs are higher than EARs so as to identify amounts that will cover people with higher than average requirements. RDA for pregnancy equals 2.6 μg/day. RDA for lactation equals 2.8 μg/day. For infants up to 12 months the Adequate Intake (AI) is 0.4-0.5 μg/day. and for children ages 1–13 years the RDA increases with age from 0.9 to 1.8 μg/day. Because 10 to 30 percent of older people may be unable to effectively absorb vitamin B12 naturally occurring in foods, it is advisable for those older than 50 years to meet their RDA mainly by consuming foods fortified with vitamin B12 or a supplement containing vitamin B12.

As for safety, the Food and Nutrition Board of the U.S. Institute of Medicine sets Tolerable Upper Intake Levels (known as ULs) for vitamins and minerals when evidence is sufficient. In the case of vitamin B12 there is no UL, as there is no human data for adverse effects from high doses. The European Food Safety Authority reviewed the same safety question and also reached the conclusion that there was not sufficient evidence to set a UL for vitamin B12.[14] Collectively the EARs, RDAs and ULs are referred to as Dietary Reference Intakes.[15]

For U.S. food and dietary supplement labeling purposes the amount in a serving is expressed as a percent of Daily Value (%DV). Daily Values were based on 1968 RDAs and have not been updated even though RDAs have gone through several changes. For vitamin B12 labeling purposes 100% of the Daily Value is 6.0 μg. Thus, for an adult, 100% DV from a food or supplement would be 250% of RDA and 300% of EAR. A table of adult Daily Values is provided at Reference Daily Intake.

Controversial sources in algae

The UK Vegan Society, the Vegetarian Resource Group, and the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, among others, recommend that vegans either consistently eat B12-fortified foods or take a daily or weekly B12 supplement to meet the recommended intake.[16][17][18]

It is important for vegans, whose food provides few sources of B12, and anyone else wishing to obtain B12 from food sources other than animals, to consume foods that contain little or no pseudovitamin-B12 and are high in biologically active B12. There have been no significant human trials of sufficient size to demonstrate enzymatic activity of B12 from nonbacterial sources, such as Chlorella and edible sea algae (seaweeds, such as lavers), although chemically some of these sources have been reported to contain B12 that seems chemically similar to active vitamin.[19][20] Among these sources, only fresh sea algae such as Susabi-nori (Porphyra yezoensis)[21][22] have been reported to demonstrate vitamin B12 activity in B12 deficient rats. This has yet to be demonstrated for Chlorella, and no study in rats of any algal B12 source has yet been confirmed by a second independent study. The possibility of algae-derived active forms of B12 presently remains an active topic of research, with no results that have yet reached consensus in the nutritional community.

Deficiency

Vitamin B12 deficiency can potentially cause severe and irreversible damage, especially to the brain and nervous system.[23] At levels only slightly lower than normal, a range of symptoms such as fatigue, depression, and poor memory may be experienced.[2] Vitamin B12 deficiency can also cause symptoms of mania and psychosis.[24][25]

Vitamin B12 deficiency is most commonly caused by low intakes, but can also result from malabsorption, certain intestinal disorders, low presence of binding proteins, and use of certain medications. Vitamin B12 is rare from plant sources, so vegetarians are most likely to suffer from vitamin B12 deficiency. Infants are at a higher risk of vitamin B12 deficiency if they were born to vegetarian mothers. The elderly who have diets with limited meat or animal products are vulnerable populations as well.[26]

Vitamin B12 deficiency can manifest itself as anemia. In some cases, deficiency can cause permanent neurological damage. Recent studies show depression is associated with vitamin B12 deficiency; sufficient vitamin B12 levels are independently associated with a decreased risk of depression and better cognitive performance adjusted for confounders.

Vitamin B12 is a co-substrate of various cell reactions involved in methylation synthesis of nucleic acid and neurotransmitters. Synthesis of the trimonoamine neurotransmitters can enhance the effects of a traditional antidepressant.[27] The intracellular concentrations of vitamin B12 can be inferred through the total plasma concentration of homocysteine, which can be converted to methionine through an enzymatic reaction that uses 5-methyltetrahydrofolate as the methyl donor group. Consequently, the plasma concentration of homocysteine falls as the intracellular concentration of vitamin B12 rises. The active metabolite of vitamin B12 is required for the methylation of homocysteine in the production of methionine, which is involved in a number of biochemical processes including the monoamine neurotransmitters metabolism. Thus, a deficiency in vitamin B12 may impact the production and function of those neurotransmitters.[28]

Imerslund-Gräsbeck syndrome is a rare disease where there is selective malabsorption of cobalamine with proteinuria caused due to defect in ileal receptor.

Sources

Foods

Ultimately, animals must obtain vitamin B12 directly or indirectly from bacteria, and these bacteria may inhabit a section of the gut that is forward of the section where B12 is absorbed. Thus, herbivorous animals must either obtain B12 from bacteria in their rumens or (if fermenting plant material in the hindgut) by reingestion of cecotrope feces. In plainer English, some herbivore animals (cows, etc.) conduct bacterial fermentation of food in upper part of the digestive system before it moves to the intestine for absorption, while others (beaver, etc.) ferment in the large intestine and then consume these feces for absorption. The second time through, the feces are different in composition and the animal does not reconsume.

Animal sources

Vitamin B12 is found in most animal-derived foods, including fish and shellfish, meat (especially liver), poultry, eggs, milk, and milk products.[2] The bioavailability from eggs is less than 9%, compared to 40% to 60% from fish, fowl and meat.[29] An NIH fact sheet lists a variety of animal food sources of B12.[2]

Non-animal sources

Besides certain fermented foods,[30][31] there are few known vegan food sources of biologically active B12 and none of these have been subjected to human trials.

Chlorella,[19][20][32] a fresh-water single-cell green alga, probably may be a source of biologically-active vitamin B12 for use by humans.[33] The B12 in Chlorella has been identified as methylcobalamin.[34] Algae are thought to acquire B12 through a symbiotic relationship with heterotrophic bacteria, in which the bacteria supply B12 in exchange for fixed carbon.[35][36] Spirulina and dried Asakusa-nori (Porphyra tenera) have been found to contain mostly pseudovitamin-B12 (see Terminology) instead of biologically active B12.[8][9] While Asakusa-nori (Porphyra tenera) contains mostly pseudovitamin-B12 in the dry state, it has been reported to contain mostly biologically active B12 in the fresh state,[9] but even its fresh state vitamin activity has not been verified by animal enzyme assay. One group of researchers has reported that the purple laver seaweed known as Susabi-nori (Pyropia yezoensis)[21][22] in its fresh state contains B12 activity in the rat model, which implies that source would be active in humans. These results have not been confirmed. Unconventional natural sources of B12 also exist, but their utility as food sources of B12 is doubtful. For example, plants pulled from the ground and not washed may contain remnants of B12 from the bacteria present in the surrounding soil.[37]

Fortified foods

Foods fortified with B12 are also dietary sources of the vitamin. Foods for which B12-fortified versions are widely available include breakfast cereals, soy products, energy bars, and nutritional yeast. The UK Vegan Society, the Vegetarian Resource Group, and the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, among others, recommend that every vegan who is not consuming adequate B12 from fortified foods takes supplements.[38][17][18] Not all of these may contain labeled amounts of vitamin activity. Supplemental B12 added to beverages in one study was found to degrade to contain varying levels of pseudovitamin-B12.

Supplements

Hydroxocobalamin injection USP (1000 µg/mL) is a clear red liquid solution of hydroxocobalamin which is available in a 30 mL brown glass multidose vial packaged in a paper box. Shown is 500 µg B12 (as 1/2 cc) drawn up in a 1/2 cc U-100 27 gauge x 1/2" insulin syringe, as prepared for subcutaneous injection.

Vitamin B12 is an ingredient in multi-vitamin pills and in some countries used to enrich grain-based foods such as bread and pasta. In the U.S. non-prescription products can be purchased providing 500 to up to 5000 µg/serving, and it is a common ingredient in energy drinks and energy shots, usually at many times the recommended dietary allowance of B12. The vitamin can also be a prescription product via injection or other means.

The sublingual route, in which B12 is presumably or supposedly taken in more directly under the tongue, has not proven to be necessary or helpful, even though a number of lozenges, pills, and even a lollipop designed for sublingual absorption are being marketed. A 2003 study found no significant difference in absorption for serum levels from oral versus sublingual delivery of 0.5 mg of cobalamin.[39] Sublingual methods of replacement are effective only because of the typically high doses (0.5 mg), which are swallowed, not because of placement of the tablet. As noted below, such very high doses of oral B12 may be effective as treatments, even if gastro-intestinal tract absorption is impaired by gastric atrophy (pernicious anemia).

Injection and patches are sometimes used if digestive absorption is impaired, but there is evidence that this course of action may not be necessary with modern high-potency oral supplements (such as 0.5–1 mg or more). Even pernicious anemia can be treated entirely by the oral route.[40][41][42] These supplements carry such large doses of the vitamin that 1% to 5% of high oral doses of free crystalline B12 is absorbed along the entire intestine by passive diffusion.

If the patient has inborn errors in the methyltransfer pathway (cobalamin C disease, combined methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria), treatment with intravenous, intramuscular hydroxocobalamin or transdermal B12 is needed.[43][44][45][46][47]

Non-cyanide forms as supplements

Recently sublingual methylcobalamin has become available in 5 mg tablets. The metabolic fate and biological distribution of methylcobalamin are expected to be similar to that of other sources of vitamin B12 in the diet.[48] No cyanide is released with methylcobalamin. The amount of cyanide (20 µg cyanide in a 1,000 µg cyanocobalamin tablet) is less than daily consumption from food. Safety of all forms of the vitamin is well established.[48]

Adverse effects

Allergies

Vitamin B12 supplements in theory should be avoided in people sensitive or allergic to cobalamin, cobalt, or any other product ingredients. Direct allergy to a vitamin or nutrient is extremely rare, and if reported, other causes should be sought.

Elevated plasma B12 (cobalamin) levels

Elevated levels of serum B12 or cobalamin (above about 600 pmol/L) in the absence of supplementation may be a diagnostic sign of serious disease. In such cases B12 is thought to be only a marker for disease, and not a causal agent.

One cause of elevated plasma B12 (cobalamin) is general liver disease, since hepatic cytolysis releases B12, and the affected liver shows decreased cobalamin clearance. Thus, acute hepatitis, cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma and metastatic liver disease can also be accompanied by an increase in circulating cobalamin. Elevated B12 levels have been suggested as a predictor of ICU mortality risk, but a recent study of this found that "[e]levated B12 levels are not a significant predictor of mortality after ICU admission when liver function is controlled for, and may instead be a proxy for poor liver function." [50]

A second group of non-supplemented patients with high cobalamin levels have them due to enhanced production of the plasma B12 transporters haptocorrin and transcobalamin II [51] This happens in hematologic disorders like chronic myelogeneous leukemia, promyelocytic leukemia, polycythemia vera and also the hypereosinophilic syndrome. Increased cobalamin levels are one of the diagnostic criteria for the latter two diseases.

A third group of non-supplemented patients with high cobalamin levels (> 600 pmol/L) may be at immediate (mostly within one year of testing) higher risk for new diagnosis of certain smoking and alcohol-related cancers which are non-hematologic. In a study of 333,000 persons in Denmark, those with elevated B12 had a three to six times higher standard incidence ratio, with respect to those with normal B12 levels, for later development of certain types of cancer.[52]

Thus, one review states: "Altogether it can be concluded that an observed elevation of cobalamin in blood merits a full diagnostic work up to assess the presence of disease." [53]

Interactions

Structure

B12 is the most chemically complex of all the vitamins. The structure of B12 is based on a corrin ring, which is similar to the porphyrin ring found in heme, chlorophyll, and cytochrome. The central metal ion is cobalt. Four of the six coordination sites are provided by the corrin ring, and a fifth by a dimethylbenzimidazole group. The sixth coordination site, the center of reactivity, is variable, being a cyano group (-CN), a hydroxyl group (-OH), a methyl group (-CH3) or a 5'-deoxyadenosyl group (here the C5' atom of the deoxyribose forms the covalent bond with Co), respectively, to yield the four B12 forms mentioned below. Historically, the covalent C-Co bond is one of the first examples of carbon-metal bonds to be discovered in biology. The hydrogenases and, by necessity, enzymes associated with cobalt utilization, involve metal-carbon bonds.[62]

Vitamin B12 is a generic descriptor name referring to a collection of cobalt and corrin ring molecules which are defined by their particular vitamin function in the body. All of the substrate cobalt-corrin molecules from which B12 is made, must be synthesized by bacteria. After this synthesis is complete, except in rare cases, the human body has the ability to convert any form of B12 to an active form, by means of enzymatically removing certain prosthetic chemical groups from the cobalt atom, and replacing them with others.

The four forms (vitamers) of B12 are all deeply red colored crystals and water solutions, due to the color of the cobalt-corrin complex.

Cyanocobalamin is one such form, i.e. "vitamer", of B12 because it can be metabolized in the body to an active co-enzyme form. The cyanocobalamin form of B12 does not occur in nature normally, but is a byproduct of the fact that other forms of B12 are avid binders of cyanide (-CN) which they pick up in the process of activated charcoal purification of the vitamin after it is made by bacteria in the commercial process. Since the cyanocobalamin form of B12 is easy to crystallize and is not sensitive to air-oxidation, it is typically used as a form of B12 for food additives and in many common multivitamins. Pure cyanocobalamin possesses the deep pink color associated with most octahedral cobalt(II) complexes and the crystals are well formed and easily grown up to millimeter size.

Hydroxocobalamin is another form of B12 commonly encountered in pharmacology, but which is not normally present in the human body. Hydroxocobalamin is sometimes denoted B12a. This form of B12 is the form produced by bacteria, and is what is converted to cyanocobalmin in the commercial charcoal filtration step of production. Hydroxocobalamin has an avid affinity for cyanide ions and has been used as an antidote to cyanide poisoning. It is supplied typically in water solution for injection. Hydroxocobalamin is thought to be converted to the active enzymic forms of B12 more easily than cyanocobalamin, and since it is little more expensive than cyanocobalamin, and has longer retention times in the body, has been used for vitamin replacement in situations where added reassurance of activity is desired. Intramuscular administration of hydroxocobalamin is also the preferred treatment for pediatric patients with intrinsic cobalamin metabolic diseases, for vitamin B12 deficient patients with tobacco amblyopia (which is thought to perhaps have a component of cyanide poisoning from cyanide in cigarette smoke); and for treatment of patients with pernicious anemia who have optic neuropathy.

Adenosylcobalamin (adoB12) and methylcobalamin (MeB12) are the two enzymatically active cofactor forms of B12 that naturally occur in the body. Most of the body's reserves are stored as adoB12 in the liver. These are converted to the other methylcobalamin form as needed.

Synthesis and industrial production

Neither plants nor animals are independently capable of constructing vitamin B12.[63] Only bacteria and archaea[64] have the enzymes required for its biosynthesis. The total synthesis of B12 was reported by Robert Burns Woodward[65] and Albert Eschenmoser in 1972,[66][67] and remains one of the classic feats of organic synthesis. Species from the following genera are known to synthesize B12: Acetobacterium, Aerobacter, Agrobacterium, Alcaligenes, Azotobacter, Bacillus, Clostridium, Corynebacterium, Flavobacterium, Lactobacillus, Micromonospora, Mycobacterium, Nocardia, Propionibacterium, Protaminobacter, Proteus, Pseudomonas, Rhizobium, Salmonella, Serratia, Streptomyces, Streptococcus and Xanthomonas.

Industrial production of B12 is achieved through fermentation of selected microorganisms.[68] Streptomyces griseus, a bacterium once thought to be a yeast, was the commercial source of vitamin B12 for many years.[69][70] The species Pseudomonas denitrificans and Propionibacterium freudenreichii subsp. shermanii are more commonly used today.[71] These are frequently grown under special conditions to enhance yield, and at least one company, Rhône-Poulenc of France, which has merged into Sanofi-Aventis, used genetically engineered versions of one or both of these species. Since a number of species of Propionibacterium produce no exotoxins or endotoxins and are generally regarded as safe (have been granted GRAS status) by the Food and Drug Administration of the United States, they are presently the FDA-preferred bacterial fermentation organisms for vitamin B12 production.[72]

The total world production of vitamin B12, by four companies (the French Sanofi-Aventis and three Chinese companies) is said to have been 35 tonnes in 2008.[73]

See cyanocobalamin for discussion of the chemical preparation of reduced-cobalt vitamin analogs and preparation of physiological forms of the vitamin such as adenosylcobalamin and methylcobalamin.

Mechanism of action

Metabolism of folic acid. The role of Vitamin B12 is seen at bottom-left.

Coenzyme B12's reactive C-Co bond participates in three main types of enzyme-catalyzed reactions.[74][75]

  1. Isomerases
    Rearrangements in which a hydrogen atom is directly transferred between two adjacent atoms with concomitant exchange of the second substituent, X, which may be a carbon atom with substituents, an oxygen atom of an alcohol, or an amine. These use the adoB12 (adenosylcobalamin) form of the vitamin.
  2. Methyltransferases
    Methyl (-CH3) group transfers between two molecules. These use MeB12 (methylcobalamin) form of the vitamin.
  3. Dehalogenases
    Reactions in which a halogen atom is removed from an organic molecule. Enzymes in this class have not been identified in humans.

In humans, two major coenzyme B12-dependent enzyme families corresponding to the first two reaction types, are known. These are typified by the following two enzymes:

  1. MUT is an isomerase which uses the AdoB12 form and reaction type 1 to catalyze a carbon skeleton rearrangement (the X group is -COSCoA). MUT's reaction converts MMl-CoA to Su-CoA, an important step in the extraction of energy from proteins and fats (for more see MUT's reaction mechanism). This functionality is lost in vitamin B12 deficiency, and can be measured clinically as an increased methylmalonic acid (MMA) level. Unfortunately, an elevated MMA, though sensitive to B12 deficiency, is probably overly sensitive, and not all who have it actually have B12 deficiency. For example, MMA is elevated in 90–98% of patients with B12 deficiency; 20–25% of patients over the age of 70 have elevated levels of MMA, yet 25–33% of them do not have B12 deficiency. For this reason, assessment of MMA levels is not routinely recommended in the elderly. There is no "gold standard" test for B12 deficiency because as a B12 deficiency occurs, serum values may be maintained while tissue B12 stores become depleted. Therefore, serum B12 values above the cut-off point of deficiency do not necessarily indicate adequate B12 status. The MUT function is necessary for proper myelin synthesis (see mechanism below) and is not affected by folate supplementation.
  2. MTR, also known as methionine synthase, is a methyltransferase enzyme, which uses the MeB12 and reaction type 2 to transfer a methyl group from 5-methyltetrahydrofolate to homocysteine, thereby generating tetrahydrofolate (THF) and methionine (for more see MTR's reaction mechanism).[76] This functionality is lost in vitamin B12 deficiency, resulting in an increased homocysteine level and the trapping of folate as 5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate, from which THF (the active form of folate) cannot be recovered. THF plays an important role in DNA synthesis so reduced availability of THF results in ineffective production of cells with rapid turnover, in particular red blood cells, and also intestinal wall cells which are responsible for absorption. THF may be regenerated via MTR or may be obtained from fresh folate in the diet. Thus all of the DNA synthetic effects of B12 deficiency, including the megaloblastic anemia of pernicious anemia, resolve if sufficient dietary folate is present.[54] Thus the best-known "function" of B12 (that which is involved with DNA synthesis, cell-division, and anemia) is actually a facultative function which is mediated by B12-conservation of an active form of folate which is needed for efficient DNA production.[77] Other cobalamin-requiring methyltransferase enzymes are also known in bacteria, such as Me-H4-MPT, coenzyme M methyl transferase.

Enzyme function

If folate is present in quantity, then of the two absolutely vitamin B12-dependent enzyme-family reactions in humans, the MUT-family reactions show the most direct and characteristic secondary effects, focusing on the nervous system (see below). This is because the MTR (methyltransferase-type) reactions are involved in regenerating folate, and thus are less evident when folate is in good supply.

Since the late 1990s, folic acid has begun to be added to fortify flour in many countries, so folate deficiency is now more rare. At the same time, since DNA synthetic-sensitive tests for anemia and erythrocyte size are routinely done in even simple medical test clinics (so that these folate-mediated biochemical effects are more often directly detected), the MTR-dependent effects of B12 deficiency are becoming apparent not as anemia due to DNA-synthetic problems (as they were classically), but now mainly as a simple and less obvious elevation of homocysteine in the blood and urine (homocysteinuria). This condition may result in long term damage to arteries and in clotting (stroke and heart attack), but this effect is difficult to separate from other common processes associated with atherosclerosis and aging.

The specific myelin damage resulting from B12 deficiency, even in the presence of adequate folate and methionine, is more specifically and clearly a vitamin deficiency problem. It has been connected to B12 most directly by reactions related to MUT, which is absolutely required to convert methylmalonyl coenzyme A into succinyl coenzyme A. Failure of this second reaction to occur results in elevated levels of MMA, a myelin destabilizer. Excessive MMA will prevent normal fatty acid synthesis, or it will be incorporated into fatty acid itself rather than normal malonic acid. If this abnormal fatty acid subsequently is incorporated into myelin, the resulting myelin will be too fragile, and demyelination will occur. Although the precise mechanism(s) are not known with certainty, the result is subacute combined degeneration of central nervous system and spinal cord.[78] Whatever the cause, it is known that B12 deficiency causes neuropathies, even if folic acid is present in good supply, and therefore anemia is not present.

Vitamin B12-dependent MTR reactions may also have neurological effects, through an indirect mechanism. Adequate methionine (which, like folate, must otherwise be obtained in the diet, if it is not regenerated from homocysteine by a B12 dependent reaction) is needed to make S-adenosyl-methionine (SAMe), which is in turn necessary for methylation of myelin sheath phospholipids. Although production of SAMe is not B12 dependent, help in recycling for provision of one adequate substrate for it (the essential amino acid methionine) is assisted by B12. In addition, SAMe is involved in the manufacture of certain neurotransmitters, catecholamines and in brain metabolism. These neurotransmitters are important for maintaining mood, possibly explaining why depression is associated with B12 deficiency. Methylation of the myelin sheath phospholipids may also depend on adequate folate, which in turn is dependent on MTR recycling, unless ingested in relatively high amounts.

Absorption and distribution

Methyl-B12 is absorbed by an intestinal mechanism using intrinsic factor and by a diffusion process in which approximately 1% of the oral dose is absorbed.[79] The human physiology of vitamin B12 is complex, and therefore is prone to mishaps leading to vitamin B12 deficiency. Protein-bound vitamin B12 must be released from the proteins by the action of digestive proteases in both the stomach and small intestine.[80] Gastric acid releases the vitamin from food particles; therefore antacid and acid-blocking medications (especially proton-pump inhibitors) may inhibit absorption of B12. In addition some elderly people produce less stomach acid as they age thereby increasing their probability of B12 deficiencies.[81]

B12 taken in a low-solubility, non-chewable supplement pill form may bypass the mouth and stomach and not mix with gastric acids, but acids are not necessary for the absorption of free B12 not bound to protein; acid is necessary only to recover naturally-occurring vitamin B12 from foods.

R-protein (also known as haptocorrin and cobalophilin) is a B12 binding protein that is produced in the salivary glands. It must wait to bind food-B12 until B12 has been freed from proteins in food by pepsin in the stomach. B12 then binds to the R-protein to avoid degradation of it in the acidic environment of the stomach.[82]

This pattern of B12 transfer to a special binding protein secreted in a previous digestive step, is repeated once more before absorption. The next binding protein for B12 is intrinsic factor (IF), a protein synthesized by gastric parietal cells that is secreted in response to histamine, gastrin and pentagastrin, as well as the presence of food. In the duodenum, proteases digest R-proteins and release their bound B12, which then binds to IF, to form a complex (IF/B12). B12 must be attached to IF for it to be efficiently absorbed, as receptors on the enterocytes in the terminal ileum of the small bowel only recognize the B12-IF complex; in addition, intrinsic factor protects the vitamin from catabolism by intestinal bacteria.

Absorption of food vitamin B12 thus requires an intact and functioning stomach, exocrine pancreas, intrinsic factor, and small bowel. Problems with any one of these organs makes a vitamin B12 deficiency possible. Individuals who lack intrinsic factor have a decreased ability to absorb B12. In pernicious anemia, there is a lack of IF due to autoimmune atrophic gastritis, in which antibodies form against parietal cells. Antibodies may alternately form against and bind to IF, inhibiting it from carrying out its B12 protective function. Due to the complexity of B12 absorption, geriatric patients, many of whom are hypoacidic due to reduced parietal cell function, have an increased risk of B12 deficiency.[83] This results in 80–100% excretion of oral doses in the feces versus 30–60% excretion in feces as seen in individuals with adequate IF.[83]

Once the IF/B12 complex is recognized by specialized ileal receptors, it is transported into the portal circulation. The vitamin is then transferred to transcobalamin II (TC-II/B12), which serves as the plasma transporter. Hereditary defects in production of the transcobalamins and their receptors may produce functional deficiencies in B12 and infantile megaloblastic anemia, and abnormal B12 related biochemistry, even in some cases with normal blood B12 levels.[60] For the vitamin to serve inside cells, the TC-II/B12 complex must bind to a cell receptor, and be endocytosed. The transcobalamin-II is degraded within a lysosome, and free B12 is finally released into the cytoplasm, where it may be transformed into the proper coenzyme, by certain cellular enzymes (see above).

Investigations into the intestinal absorption of B12 point out that the upper limit of absorption per single oral dose, under normal conditions, is about 1.5 µg: "Studies in normal persons indicated that about 1.5 µg is assimilated when a single dose varying from 5 to 50 µg is administered by mouth. In a similar study Swendseid et al. stated that the average maximum absorption was 1.6 µg [...]" [84] The bulk diffusion process of B12 absorption noted in the first paragraph above, may overwhelm the complex R-factor and IGF-factor dependent absorption, when oral doses of B12 are very large (a thousand or more µg per dose) as commonly happens in dedicated-pill oral B12 supplementation. It is this last fact which allows pernicious anemia and certain other defects in B12 absorption to be treated with oral megadoses of B12, even without any correction of the underlying absorption defects.[85] See the section on supplements above.

The total amount of vitamin B12 stored in body is about 2–5 mg in adults. Around 50% of this is stored in the liver. Approximately 0.1% of this is lost per day by secretions into the gut, as not all these secretions are reabsorbed. Bile is the main form of B12 excretion; most of the B12 secreted in the bile is recycled via enterohepatic circulation. Excess B12 beyond the blood's binding capacity is typically excreted in urine. Owing to the extremely efficient enterohepatic circulation of B12, the liver can store several years’ worth of vitamin B12; therefore, nutritional deficiency of this vitamin is rare. How fast B12 levels change depends on the balance between how much B12 is obtained from the diet, how much is secreted and how much is absorbed. B12 deficiency may arise in a year if initial stores are low and genetic factors unfavourable, or may not appear for decades. In infants, B12 deficiency can appear much more quickly.[86]

History

B12 deficiency is the cause of pernicious anemia, an anemic disease that was usually fatal and had unknown etiology when it was first described in medicine. The cure, and B12, were discovered by accident. George Whipple had been doing experiments in which he induced anemia in dogs by bleeding them, and then fed them various foods to observe which diets allowed them fastest recovery from the anemia produced. In the process, he discovered that ingesting large amounts of liver seemed to most rapidly cure the anemia of blood loss. Thus, he hypothesized that liver ingestion might treat pernicious anemia. He tried this and reported some signs of success in 1920.

After a series of clinical studies, George Richards Minot and William Murphy set out to partly isolate the substance in liver which cured anemia in dogs, and found that it was iron. They also found that an entirely different liver substance cured pernicious anemia in humans, that had no effect on dogs under the conditions used. The specific factor treatment for pernicious anemia, found in liver juice, had been found by this coincidence. Minot and Murphy reported these experiments in 1926. This was the first real progress with this disease. Despite this discovery, for several years patients were still required to eat large amounts of raw liver or to drink considerable amounts of liver juice.

In 1928, the chemist Edwin Cohn prepared a liver extract that was 50 to 100 times more potent than the natural liver products. The extract was the first workable treatment for the disease. For their initial work in pointing the way to a working treatment, Whipple, Minot, and Murphy shared the 1934 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

These events led to discovery of the soluble vitamin, called vitamin B12, from bacterial broths. In 1947, while working for the Poultry Science Department at the University of Maryland, Mary Shaw Shorb (in a collaborative project with Karl Folkers from Merck.) was provided with a $400 grant to develop the so-called "LLD assay" for B12. LLD stood for Lactobacillus lactis Dorner,[87] a strain of bacterium which required "LLD factor" for growth, which was eventually identified as B12. Shorb and colleagues used the LLD assay to rapidly extract the anti-pernicious anemia factor from liver extracts, and pure B12 was isolated in this way by 1948, with the contributions of chemists Shorb,[88] Karl A. Folkers of the United States and Alexander R. Todd of Great Britain. For this discovery, in 1949 Mary Shorb and Karl Folkers received the Mead Johnson Award from the American Society of Nutritional Sciences.[88]

The chemical structure of the molecule was determined by Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin and her team in 1956, based on crystallographic data.[89] Eventually, methods of producing the vitamin in large quantities from bacteria cultures were developed in the 1950s, and these led to the modern form of treatment for the disease.

See also

References

  1. Yamada, Kazuhiro (2013). "Chapter 9. Cobalt: Its Role in Health and Disease". In Astrid Sigel, Helmut Sigel and Roland K. O. Sigel. Interrelations between Essential Metal Ions and Human Diseases. Metal Ions in Life Sciences 13. Springer. pp. 295–320. doi:10.1007/978-94-007-7500-8_9.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Dietary Supplement Fact Sheet: Vitamin B12". Office of Dietary Supplements, National Institutes of Health. Retrieved September 28, 2011.
  3. Albert, M. J.; Mathan, V. I.; Baker, S. J. (1980). "Vitamin B12 synthesis by human small intestinal bacteria". Nature 283 (5749): 781–782. doi:10.1038/283781a0. PMID 7354869.
  4. Chanarin, I.; Muir, M. (1982). "Demonstration of vitamin B12 analogues in human sera not detected by microbiological assay". British journal of haematology 51 (1): 171–173. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2141.1982.tb07301.x. PMID 7041953.
  5. Kelly, R. J.; Gruner, T. M.; Furlong, J. M.; Sykes, A. R. (2006). "Analysis of corrinoids in ovine tissues". Biomedical Chromatography 20 (8): 806–814. doi:10.1002/bmc.604. PMID 16345011.
  6. Yamada, K.; Shimodaira, M.; Chida, S.; Yamada, N.; Matsushima, N.; Fukuda, M.; Yamada, S. (2008). "Degradation of Vitamin B12 in Dietary Supplements". International Journal for Vitamin and Nutrition Research 78 (45): 195–203. doi:10.1024/0300-9831.78.45.195. PMID 19326342.
  7. Herbert, V.; Drivas, G.; Foscaldi, R.; Manusselis, C.; Colman, N.; Kanazawa, S.; Das, K.; Gelernt, M.; Herzlich, B.; Jennings, J. (1982). "Multivitamin/Mineral Food Supplements Containing Vitamin B12May Also Contain Analogues of Vitamin B12". New England Journal of Medicine 307 (4): 255–256. doi:10.1056/NEJM198207223070424. PMID 7088084.
  8. 1 2 Watanabe, F.; Katsura, H.; Takenaka, S.; Fujita, T.; Abe, K.; Tamura, Y.; Nakatsuka, T.; Nakano, Y. (1999). "Pseudovitamin B(12) is the predominant cobamide of an algal health food, spirulina tablets". Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 47 (11): 4736–4741. doi:10.1021/jf990541b. PMID 10552882.
  9. 1 2 3 Yamada, K.; Yamada, Y.; Fukuda, M.; Yamada, S. (1999). "Bioavailability of dried asakusanori (porphyra tenera) as a source of Cobalamin (Vitamin B12)". International journal for vitamin and nutrition research. Internationale Zeitschrift fur Vitamin- und Ernahrungsforschung. Journal international de vitaminologie et de nutrition 69 (6): 412–418. doi:10.1024/0300-9831.69.6.412. PMID 10642899.
  10. 1 2 "Vitamin B12". The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  11. Hall AH, Rumack BH (1987). "Hydroxycobalamin/sodium thiosulfate as a cyanide antidote". The Journal of Emergency Medicine 5 (2): 115–21. doi:10.1016/0736-4679(87)90074-6. PMID 3295013.
  12. Dart RC (2006). "Hydroxocobalamin for acute cyanide poisoning: new data from preclinical and clinical studies; new results from the prehospital emergency setting". Clinical Toxicology 44 (Suppl 1): 1–3. doi:10.1080/15563650600811607. PMID 16990188.
  13. Vogiatzoglou A, Refsum H, Johnston C, et al. (2008). "Vitamin B12 status and rate of brain volume loss in community-dwelling elderly". Neurology 71 (11): 826–32. doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000325581.26991.f2. PMID 18779510.
  14. "Tolerable Upper Intake Levels For Vitamins And Minerals" (PDF). European Food Safety Authority. 2006.
  15. Institute of Medicine (1998). "Vitamin B12". Dietary Reference Intakes for Thiamin, Riboflavin, Niacin, Vitamin B6, Folate, Vitamin B12, Pantothenic Acid, Biotin, and Choline. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. pp. 340–342. ISBN 0-309-06554-2. Retrieved 2012-02-07.
  16. Walsh, Stephen. "What every vegan should know about vitamin B12". Vegan Society. Archived from the original on 2007-07-17. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  17. 1 2 Mangels, Reed. "Vitamin B12 in the Vegan Diet". Vegetarian Resource Group. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
  18. 1 2 "Don't Vegetarians Have Trouble Getting Enough Vitamin B12?". Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
  19. 1 2 Kittaka-Katsura, H.; Fujita, T.; Watanabe, F.; Nakano, Y. (2002). "Purification and characterization of a corrinoid compound from Chlorella tablets as an algal health food". Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 50 (17): 4994–4997. doi:10.1021/jf020345w. PMID 12166996.
  20. 1 2 Watanabe, F.; Takenaka, S.; Kittaka-Katsura, H.; Ebara, S.; Miyamoto, E. (2002). "Characterization and bioavailability of vitamin B12-compounds from edible algae". Journal of nutritional science and vitaminology 48 (5): 325–331. doi:10.3177/jnsv.48.325. PMID 12656203.
  21. 1 2 Watanabe, F.; Takenaka, S.; Katsura, H.; Miyamoto, E.; Abe, K.; Tamura, Y.; Nakatsuka, T.; Nakano, Y. (2000). "Characterization of a vitamin B12 compound in the edible purple laver, Porphyra yezoensis". Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry 64 (12): 2712–2715. doi:10.1271/bbb.64.2712. PMID 11210144.
  22. 1 2 Takenaka, S.; Sugiyama, S.; Ebara, S.; Miyamoto, E.; Abe, K.; Tamura, Y.; Watanabe, F.; Tsuyama, S.; Nakano, Y. (2001). "Feeding dried purple laver (nori) to vitamin B12-deficient rats significantly improves vitamin B12 status". The British journal of nutrition 85 (6): 699–703. doi:10.1079/BJN2001352. PMID 11430774.
  23. Put, Nathalie M. J. van der; Straaten, Henny W. M. van; Trijbels, Frans J. M.; Blom, Henk J. (2001-04-01). "Folate, Homocysteine and Neural Tube Defects: An Overview". Experimental Biology and Medicine 226 (4): 243–270. ISSN 1535-3702. PMID 11368417.
  24. Sethi NK, Robilotti E, Sadan Y (2005). "Neurological Manifestations Of Vitamin B-12 Deficiency". The Internet Journal of Nutrition and Wellness 2 (1). doi:10.5580/5a9.
  25. Masalha R, Chudakov B, Muhamad M, Rudoy I, Volkov I, Wirguin I (2001). "Cobalamin-responsive psychosis as the sole manifestation of vitamin B12 deficiency". Israeli Medical Association Journal 3: 701–703. PMID 11574992.
  26. Killen, J. P.; Brenninger, V. L. (2013). "Vitamin B12 deficiency". N. Engl. J. Med. 368: 2040–1. doi:10.1056/nejmc1304350.
  27. Biemans, E.; Hart, H.E.; Rutten, G.E.; Renteria, V.G.C.; Kooijman-Buiting, A.M.; Beulens, J.W. (2014). "Cobalamin status has a relationship with depression, cognition and neuropathy in patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus using metformin". Acta diabetologica: 1–11.
  28. Bottiglieri, T.; Laundy, M.; Crellin, R.; Toone, B.K.; Carney, M.W.; Reynolds, E.H. (2000). "Homocysteine, folate, methylation, and monoamine metabolism in depression". Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry 69 (2): 228–232. doi:10.1136/jnnp.69.2.228.
  29. Watanabe F (2007). "Vitamin B12 sources and bioavailability". Exp. Biol. Med. (Maywood) 232 (10): 1266–74. doi:10.3181/0703-MR-67. PMID 17959839.
  30. Kwak, C. S.; Lee, M. S.; Lee, H. J.; Whang, J. Y.; Park, S. C. (2010). "Dietary source of vitamin B12intake and vitamin B12status in female elderly Koreans aged 85 and older living in rural area". Nutrition Research and Practice 4 (3): 229–234. doi:10.4162/nrp.2010.4.3.229. PMC 2895704. PMID 20607069.
  31. Kwak, C. S.; Lee, M. S.; Oh, S. I.; Park, S. C. (2010). "Discovery of Novel Sources of Vitamin B12 in Traditional Korean Foods from Nutritional Surveys of Centenarians". Current Gerontology and Geriatrics Research 2010: 1–11. doi:10.1155/2010/374897. PMC 3062981. PMID 21436999.
  32. Nakano, S.; Takekoshi, H.; Nakano, M. (2009). "Chlorella pyrenoidosa Supplementation Reduces the Risk of Anemia, Proteinuria and Edema in Pregnant Women". Plant Foods for Human Nutrition 65 (1): 25–30. doi:10.1007/s11130-009-0145-9. PMID 20013055.
  33. Merchant, Randall Edward; Phillips, Todd; Udani, Jay (2015). "Nutritional Supplementation with Chlorella pyrenoidosa Lowers Serum Methylmalonic Acid in Vegans and Vegetarians with a Suspected Vitamin B12 Deficiency.". Journal of Medicinal Food. doi:10.1089/jmf.2015.0056. PMID 26485478.
  34. Kumudha, Anantharajappa; Selvakumar, Sagaya; Dilshad, Pullancheri; Vaidyanathan, Gopal; Thakur, Munna; Sarada, Ravi (2015). "Methylcobalamin--a form of vitamin B12 identified and characterised in Chlorella vulgaris.". Food Chemistry 170 (1): 316–320. doi:10.1016/j.foodchem.2014.08.035. PMID 25306351.
  35. Croft, M. T.; Lawrence, A. D.; Raux-Deery, E.; Warren, M. J.; Smith, A. G. (2005). "Algae acquire vitamin B12 through a symbiotic relationship with bacteria". Nature 438 (7064): 90–93. doi:10.1038/nature04056. PMID 16267554.
  36. Kazamia, E.; Czesnick, H. R.; Nguyen, T. T. V.; Croft, M. T.; Sherwood, E.; Sasso, S.; Hodson, S. J.; Warren, M. J.; Smith, A. G. (2012). "Mutualistic interactions between vitamin B12-dependent algae and heterotrophic bacteria exhibit regulation". Environmental Microbiology 14 (6): 1466–1476. doi:10.1111/j.1462-2920.2012.02733.x. PMID 22463064.
  37. Herbert, Victor (1988). "Vitamin B-12: Plant sources, requirements, and assay" (PDF). The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 48 (3 Suppl): 852–8. PMID 3046314.
  38. Walsh, Stephen, RD. "Vegan Society B12factsheet". Vegan Society. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
  39. Sharabi, A; Cohen, E; Sulkes, J; Garty, M (2003). "Replacement therapy for vitamin B12 deficiency: comparison between the sublingual and oral route". British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 56 (6): 635–8. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2125.2003.01907.x. PMC 1884303. PMID 14616423.
  40. Bolaman Z, Kadikoylu G, Yukselen V, Yavasoglu I, Barutca S, Senturk T; Kadikoylu; Yukselen; Yavasoglu; Barutca; Senturk (2003). "Oral versus intramuscular cobalamin treatment in megaloblastic anemia: a single-center, prospective, randomized, open-label study". Clin Ther 25 (12): 3124–34. doi:10.1016/S0149-2918(03)90096-8. PMID 14749150.
  41. Lane LA, Rojas-Fernandez C; Rojas-Fernandez (2002). "Treatment of vitamin b(12)-deficiency anemia: oral versus parenteral therapy". Ann Pharmacother 36 (7–8): 1268–72. doi:10.1345/aph.1A122. PMID 12086562.
  42. Butler, C. C. (2006). "Oral vitamin B12 versus intramuscular vitamin B12 for vitamin B12 deficiency: A systematic review of randomized controlled trials". Family Practice 23 (3): 279–285. doi:10.1093/fampra/cml008. PMID 16585128.
  43. Andersson HC, Shapira E; Shapira (1998). "Biochemical and clinical response to hydroxocobalamin versus cyanocobalamin treatment in patients with methylmalonic acidemia and homocystinuria (cblC)". J. Pediatr. 132 (1): 121–4. doi:10.1016/S0022-3476(98)70496-2. PMID 9470012.
  44. Roze E, Gervais D, Demeret S; et al. (2003). "Neuropsychiatric disturbances in presumed late-onset cobalamin C disease". Arch. Neurol. 60 (10): 1457–62. doi:10.1001/archneur.60.10.1457. PMID 14568819.
  45. Thauvin-Robinet C, Roze E, Couvreur G; et al. (2008). "The adolescent and adult form of cobalamin C disease: clinical and molecular spectrum". J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr. 79 (6): 725–8. doi:10.1136/jnnp.2007.133025. PMID 18245139.
  46. Heil SG, Hogeveen M, Kluijtmans LA; et al. (2007). "Marfanoid features in a child with combined methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria (CblC type)". J. Inherit. Metab. Dis. 30 (5): 811. doi:10.1007/s10545-007-0546-6. PMID 17768669.
  47. Tsai, A. C. H.; Morel, C. F.; Scharer, G.; Yang, M.; Lerner-Ellis, J. P.; Rosenblatt, D. S.; Thomas, J. A. (2007). "Late-onset combined homocystinuria and methylmalonic aciduria (cblC) and neuropsychiatric disturbance". American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A 143A (20): 2430–2434. doi:10.1002/ajmg.a.31932. PMID 17853453.
  48. 1 2 Aguilar, F.; et al. (September 25, 2008). "5’-deoxyadenosylcobalamin and methylcobalamin as sources for Vitamin B12 added as a nutritional substance in food supplements: Scientific opinion of the Scientific Panel on Food Additives and Nutrient Sources added to food". EFSA Journal 815: 1–21. doi:10.2903/j.efsa.2008.815. "the metabolic fate and biological distribution of methylcobalamin and 5’-deoxyadenosylcobalamin are expected to be similar to that of other sources of vitamin B12 in the diet."
  49. Pott JW, Wong KH (2006). "Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy and vitamin B12 deficiency". Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology 244 (10): 1357–9. doi:10.1007/s00417-006-0269-7. PMID 16523300.
  50. ESPEN J. 2014 April 1;9(2):e76-e83. High vitamin B12 levels are not associated with increased mortality risk for ICU patients after adjusting for liver function: a cohort study. PMID 24665415
  51. Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine 2013 March 1;51(3):489–96. doi: 10.1515/cclm-2012-0545. "Unexpected high plasma cobalamin: proposal for a diagnostic strategy". Arendt JF(1), Nexo E. PMID 23241600
  52. 1. Journal of the National Cancer Institute 2013 December 4;105(23):1799–805. doi: 10.1093/jnci/djt315. Epub 2013 November 18. "Elevated plasma vitamin B12 levels as a marker for cancer: a population-based cohort study". PMID 24249744
  53. Clinical Biochemistry 2003 November; 36(8):585–90. "Significance of elevated cobalamin (vitamin B12) levels in blood". Ermens AA(1), Vlasveld LT, Lindemans J. PMID 14636871
  54. 1 2 "Argument for providing B12 with food fortification of folate, since otherwise folate will correct hematological symptoms while leaving neurological symptoms to progress". Victorherbert.com. Retrieved 2013-04-20.
  55. De Jager, J.; Kooy, A.; Lehert, P.; Wulffelé, M. G.; Van Der Kolk, J.; Bets, D.; Verburg, J.; Donker, A. J. M.; Stehouwer, C. D. A. (2010). "Long term treatment with metformin in patients with type 2 diabetes and risk of vitamin B-12 deficiency: Randomised placebo controlled trial". BMJ 340: c2181. doi:10.1136/bmj.c2181. PMC 2874129. PMID 20488910.
  56. Andrès E, Noel E, Goichot B (2002). "Metformin-associated vitamin B12 deficiency". Arch Intern Med 162 (19): 2251–2. doi:10.1001/archinte.162.19.2251-a. PMID 12390080.
  57. Gilligan M (2002). "Metformin and vitamin B12 deficiency". Arch Intern Med 162 (4): 484–5. doi:10.1001/archinte.162.4.484. PMID 11863489.
  58. Bauman, WA; Shaw, S; Jayatilleke, E; Spungen, AM; Herbert, V (2000). "Increased intake of calcium reverses vitamin B12 malabsorption induced by metformin". Diabetes Care 23 (9): 1227–31. doi:10.2337/diacare.23.9.1227. PMID 10977010.
  59. Copp, Samantha (2007-12-01). "What effect does metformin have on vitamin B12 levels?". UK Medicines Information, NHS. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
  60. 1 2 Pernicious Anemia at eMedicine
  61. Palva, IP; Salokannel, SJ; Timonen, T; Palva, HL (1972). "Drug-induced malabsorption of vitamin B12: IV. Malabsorption and deficiency of B12 during treatment with slow-release potassium chloride". Acta Medica Scandinavica 191 (4): 355–7. PMID 5032681.
  62. Jaouen, G., ed. (2006). Bioorganometallics: Biomolecules, Labeling, Medicine. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. ISBN 3-527-30990-X.
  63. Loeffler, G. (2005). Basiswissen Biochemie. Heidelberg: Springer. p. 606. ISBN 3-540-23885-9.
  64. Bertrand EM; Saito MA; Young JJ; Neilan BA (2011). "Vitamin B12 biosynthesis gene diversity in the Ross Sea: the identification of a new group of putative polar B12 biosynthes". Environmental Microbiology 13 (5): 1285–98. doi:10.1111/j.1462-2920.2011.02428.x. PMID 21410623.
  65. Khan, Adil Ghani; Eswaran, S. V. (2003). "Woodward's synthesis of vitamin B12". Resonance 8 (6): 8–16. doi:10.1007/BF02837864.
  66. Eschenmoser A, Wintner CE (June 1977). "Natural product synthesis and vitamin B12". Science 196 (4297): 1410–20. doi:10.1126/science.867037. PMID 867037.
  67. Riether, Doris; Mulzer, Johann (2003). "Total Synthesis of Cobyric Acid: Historical Development and Recent Synthetic Innovations". European Journal of Organic Chemistry 2003: 30–45. doi:10.1002/1099-0690(200301)2003:1<30::AID-EJOC30>3.0.CO;2-I.
  68. Martens JH, Barg H, Warren MJ, Jahn D (2002). "Microbial production of vitamin B12". Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology 58 (3): 275–85. doi:10.1007/s00253-001-0902-7. PMID 11935176.
  69. Linnell JC, Matthews DM (1984). "Cobalamin metabolism and its clinical aspects". Clinical Science 66 (2): 113–21. PMID 6420106.
  70. Vitamin B12. Code of Federal Regulations. U.S. Government Printing Office. Title 21, Volume 3. Revised. April 1, 2001. CITE: 21CFR184.1945 p. 552
  71. De Baets S, Vandedrinck S, Vandamme EJ (2000). "Vitamins and Related Biofactors, Microbial Production". In Lederberg J. Encyclopedia of Microbiology 4 (2nd ed.). New York: Academic Press. pp. 837–853. ISBN 0-12-226800-8.
  72. Riaz, Muhammad; Iqbal, Fouzia; Akram, Muhammad (2007). "Microbial production of vitamin B12 by methanol utilizing strain of Pseudomonas specie". Pak J. Biochem. Mol. Biol. 1 40: 5–10.
  73. Yemei, Zhang (January 26, 2009) New round of price slashing in vitamin B12 sector. (Fine and Specialty). China Chemical Reporter.
  74. Voet, Judith G.; Voet, Donald (1995). Biochemistry. New York: J. Wiley & Sons. p. 675. ISBN 0-471-58651-X. OCLC 31819701.
  75. Banerjee, R; Ragsdale, SW (2003). "The many faces of vitamin B12: catalysis by cobalamin-dependent enzymes". Annual Review of Biochemistry 72: 209–47. doi:10.1146/annurev.biochem.72.121801.161828. PMID 14527323.
  76. Banerjee RV, Matthews RG (1990). "Cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase". The FASEB Journal 4 (5): 1450–9. PMID 2407589.
  77. Wickramasinghe SN (1995). "Morphology, biology and biochemistry of cobalamin- and folate-deficient bone marrow cells". Baillière's Clinical Haematology 8 (3): 441–59. doi:10.1016/S0950-3536(05)80215-X. PMID 8534956.
  78. Naidich MJ, Ho SU (2005). "Case 87: Subacute combined degeneration". Radiology 237 (1): 101–5. doi:10.1148/radiol.2371031757. PMID 16183926.
  79. CerefolinNAC® Caplets. intetlab.com
  80. Marks, Allan D. (2009) Basic Medical Biochemistry: A Clinical Approach, 3rd ed., Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, p. 757, ISBN 078177022X.
  81. Beck, Melinda (January 18, 2011). "Sluggish? Confused? Vitamin B12 May Be Low". The Wall Street Journal.
  82. Allen, RH; Seetharam, B; Podell, E; Alpers, DH (1978). "Effect of Proteolytic Enzymes on the Binding of Cobalamin to R Protein and Intrinsic Factor". The Journal of Clinical Investigation 61 (1): 47–54. doi:10.1172/JCI108924. PMC 372512. PMID 22556.
  83. 1 2 Combs, Gerald F. (2008). The vitamins: fundamental aspects in nutrition and health (3rd ed.). Amsterdam: Elsevier Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-183492-1. OCLC 150255807.
  84. Abels, J.; Vegter, J. J. M.; Woldring, M. G.; Jans, J. H.; Nieweg, H. O. (2009). "The Physiologic Mechanism of Vitamin B12 Absorption". Acta Medica Scandinavica 165 (2): 105–113. doi:10.1111/j.0954-6820.1959.tb14477.x.
  85. Kuzminski AM, Del Giacco EJ, Allen RH, Stabler SP, Lindenbaum J (August 1998). "Effective treatment of cobalamin deficiency with oral cobalamin". Blood 92 (4): 1191–1198. PMID 9694707.
  86. "B12: An essential part of a healthy plant-based diet". International Vegetarian Union.
  87. "Mary Shorb Lecture in Nutrition". Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  88. 1 2 "Dr. Mary Shaw Shorb – Annual Lecture". Department of Animal & Avian Sciences, University of Maryland. May 10, 2012.
  89. Kirkland, Kyle (2010). Biological Sciences: Notable Research and Discoveries. Facts on File, Inc. p. 87. ISBN 0816074399.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, May 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.