Vitamins C, E and Rats Exercise

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Vitamin E deficiency and vitamin C supplements: exercise and mitochondrial oxidation


The effects of dietary antioxidant vitamins E and C on exercise endurance capacity and mitochondrial oxidation were investigated in rats. The endurance capacity of both vitamin E-deficient and vitamin C-supplemented, E-deficient rats was significantly (P less than 0.05) lower (38.1 and 33.6%, respectively) than control animals. Compared with the normal and vitamin E-deficient rats, there was a significant (P less than 0.05) increase in the concentration of vitamin C in blood and liver of the vitamin E-deficient, C-supplemented animals. Hence dietary vitamin C supplementation does not prevent the inhibition of exercise endurance capacity or increased hemolysis seen in vitamin E deficiency. The mitochondrial activities for the oxidation of palmitoyl carnitine and alpha-ketoglutarate were significantly (P less than 0.05) decreased by a single bout of exercise in brown adipose tissue but not in muscle, heart, or liver from vitamin C-supplemented, E-deficient groups of rats when compared with the activities in the tissue from the same group of rats killed at rest. Similar results were also seen in brown adipose tissue from vitamin E-deficient rats. The results suggest a tissue-specific role for vitamins E and C in substrate oxidation and show that the poor endurance capacity of vitamin E-deficient rats cannot be attributed to any changes in the mitochondrial activity in skeletal or cardiac muscles. It is also concluded that vitamin C supplementation, at least at the dose employed in the present study, cannot counteract the detrimental effects associated with vitamin E deficiency.

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