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Publication : Genetic evidence that retinaldehyde dehydrogenase Raldh1 (Aldh1a1) functions downstream of alcohol dehydrogenase Adh1 in metabolism of retinol to retinoic acid.

First Author  Molotkov A Year  2003
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  278
Issue  38 Pages  36085-90
PubMed ID  12851412 Mgi Jnum  J:85538
Mgi Id  MGI:2675573 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M303709200
Citation  Molotkov A, et al. (2003) Genetic evidence that retinaldehyde dehydrogenase Raldh1 (Aldh1a1) functions downstream of alcohol dehydrogenase Adh1 in metabolism of retinol to retinoic acid. J Biol Chem 278(38):36085-90
abstractText  Vitamin A (retinol) is a nutrient that is essential for developmental regulation but toxic in large amounts. Previous genetic studies have revealed that alcohol dehydrogenase Adh1 is required for efficient clearance of excess retinol to prevent toxicity, thus demonstrating that the mechanism involves oxidation of excess retinol to retinoic acid (RA). Whereas Adh1 plays a dominant role in the first step of the clearance pathway (oxidation of retinol to retinaldehyde), it is unknown what controls the second step (oxidation of retinaldehyde to RA). We now present genetic evidence that aldehyde dehydrogenase Aldh1a1, also known as retinaldehyde dehydrogenase Raldh1, plays a dominant role in the second step of retinol clearance in adult mice. Serum RA levels following a 50 mg/kg dose of retinol were reduced 72% in Raldh1-/- mice and 82% in Adh1-/- mice. This represented reductions in RA synthesis of 77-78% for each mutant after corrections for altered RA degradation in each. After retinol dosing, serum retinaldehyde was increased 2.5-fold in Raldh1-/- mice (indicating defective retinaldehyde clearance) and decreased 3-fold in Adh1-/- mice (indicating defective retinaldehyde synthesis). Serum retinol clearance following retinol administration was decreased 7% in Raldh1-/- mice and 69% in Adh1-/- mice. LD50 studies indicated a small increase in retinol toxicity in Raldh1-/- mice and a large increase in Adh1-/- mice. These observations demonstrate that Raldh1 functions downstream of Adh1 in the oxidative metabolism of excess retinol and that toxicity correlates primarily with accumulating retinol rather than retinaldehyde.
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