Influence of cobalamin deficiency compared with that of cobalamin absorption on serum holo-transcobalamin II.

Article Details

Citation

Chen X, Remacha AF, Sarda MP, Carmel R

Influence of cobalamin deficiency compared with that of cobalamin absorption on serum holo-transcobalamin II.

Am J Clin Nutr. 2005 Jan;81(1):110-4.

PubMed ID
15640468 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cobalamin attached to transcobalamin II (TC II), known as holo-TC II, is the active cobalamin fraction taken up by tissues. Holo-TC II is also the form in which absorbed cobalamin enters the circulation from the ileum. Therefore, holo-TC II has been proposed variously as a marker of cobalamin adequacy, cobalamin absorption, or both, including even its advocacy as a surrogate Schilling test. Such claims carry conflicting diagnostic implications because metabolic adequacy and absorption are not identical. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to examine metabolic and absorptive influences on holo-TC II. DESIGN: Treated patients with pernicious anemia (PA), who have abnormal absorption but a normal metabolic status, were chosen as the model to differentiate between the effects of the 2 cobalamin-related characteristics. Serum holo-TC II and indexes of cobalamin metabolism in 23 treated patients were compared with those of 6 untreated PA patients (abnormal absorption and metabolic status) and 33 control subjects (normal absorption and metabolic status). RESULTS: Holo-TC II, which correlated directly with cobalamin and inversely with homocysteine, was significantly higher in treated PA patients in metabolic remission than in untreated PA patients (74 +/- 59 compared with 9 +/- 6 pmol/L) and was significantly lower than in control subjects (105 +/- 58 pmol/L), although the latter difference was small and the values overlapped greatly. CONCLUSIONS: Metabolic cobalamin status is a major determinant of serum holo-TC II. Absorption status may have mild influence as well, although other explanations remain possible. Serum holo-TC II cannot be used clinically to diagnose cobalamin malabsorption because of overlap with normal values. The influences on holo-TC II are complex and require careful analysis.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Drug Transporters
DrugTransporterKindOrganismPharmacological ActionActions
CyanocobalaminTranscobalamin-2ProteinHumans
Unknown
Substrate
Details