Effective disease-modifying treatments are an urgent need for Parkinson's disease (PD). A putative successful strategy is to counteract oxidative stress, not only with synthetic compounds, but also with natural agents or dietary choices. Vitamin E, in particular, is a powerful antioxidant, commonly found in vegetables and other components of the diet. In this work, we performed a questionnaire based case-control study on 100 PD patients and 100 healthy controls. The analysis showed that a higher dietary intake of Vitamin E was inversely associated with PD occurrence independently from age and gender (OR = 1.022; 95% CI = 0.999-1.045; p < 0.05), though unrelated to clinical severity. Then, in order to provide a mechanistic explanation for such observation, we tested the effects of Vitamin E and other alimentary antioxidants in vitro, by utilizing the homozygous PTEN-induced kinase 1 knockout (PINK1-/-) mouse model of PD. PINK1-/- mice exhibit peculiar alterations of synaptic plasticity at corticostriatal synapses, consisting in the loss of both long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD), in the absence of overt neurodegeneration. Chronic administration of Vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol and the water-soluble analog trolox) fully restored corticostriatal synaptic plasticity in PINK1-/- mice, suggestive of a specific protective action. Vitamin E might indeed compensate PINK1 haploinsufficiency and mitochondrial impairment, reverting some central steps of the pathogenic process. Altogether, both clinical and experimental findings suggest that Vitamin E could be a potential, useful agent for PD patients. These data, although preliminary, may encourage future confirmatory trials.

Schirinzi, T., Martella, G., Imbriani, P., Di Lazzaro, G., Franco, D., Colona, V. L., Alwardat, M., Salimei, P. S., Mercuri, N. B., Pierantozzi, M., Pisani, A., Dietary Vitamin E as a protective factor for Parkinson's disease: Clinical and experimental evidence, <<FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY>>, 2019; 10 (2019): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.3389/fneur.2019.00148] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/328768]

Dietary Vitamin E as a protective factor for Parkinson's disease: Clinical and experimental evidence

Di Lazzaro, Giulia;
2019

Abstract

Effective disease-modifying treatments are an urgent need for Parkinson's disease (PD). A putative successful strategy is to counteract oxidative stress, not only with synthetic compounds, but also with natural agents or dietary choices. Vitamin E, in particular, is a powerful antioxidant, commonly found in vegetables and other components of the diet. In this work, we performed a questionnaire based case-control study on 100 PD patients and 100 healthy controls. The analysis showed that a higher dietary intake of Vitamin E was inversely associated with PD occurrence independently from age and gender (OR = 1.022; 95% CI = 0.999-1.045; p < 0.05), though unrelated to clinical severity. Then, in order to provide a mechanistic explanation for such observation, we tested the effects of Vitamin E and other alimentary antioxidants in vitro, by utilizing the homozygous PTEN-induced kinase 1 knockout (PINK1-/-) mouse model of PD. PINK1-/- mice exhibit peculiar alterations of synaptic plasticity at corticostriatal synapses, consisting in the loss of both long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD), in the absence of overt neurodegeneration. Chronic administration of Vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol and the water-soluble analog trolox) fully restored corticostriatal synaptic plasticity in PINK1-/- mice, suggestive of a specific protective action. Vitamin E might indeed compensate PINK1 haploinsufficiency and mitochondrial impairment, reverting some central steps of the pathogenic process. Altogether, both clinical and experimental findings suggest that Vitamin E could be a potential, useful agent for PD patients. These data, although preliminary, may encourage future confirmatory trials.
2019
AREA06 - SCIENZE MEDICHE
Pubblicazione su rivista con Impact Factor
Inglese
Articolo in rivista
Inglese
Antioxidant
Diet
Neuroprotection
Parkinson's disease
PINK1
Protective factors
Synaptic plasticity
Vitamin E
Settore MEDS-12/A - Neurologia
Frontiers Media S.A.
10
2019
2019
N/A
N/A
148
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Schirinzi, T., Martella, G., Imbriani, P., Di Lazzaro, G., Franco, D., Colona, V. L., Alwardat, M., Salimei, P. S., Mercuri, N. B., Pierantozzi, M., Pisani, A., Dietary Vitamin E as a protective factor for Parkinson's disease: Clinical and experimental evidence, <<FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY>>, 2019; 10 (2019): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.3389/fneur.2019.00148] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/328768]
open
262
Schirinzi, T.; Martella, G.; Imbriani, P.; Di Lazzaro, Giulia; Franco, D.; Colona, V. L.; Alwardat, M.; Salimei, P. S.; Mercuri, N. B.; Pierantozzi, M...espandi
11
art_per_29
03. Contributo in rivista::Articolo in rivista, Nota a sentenza
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