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Benefits
Benfotiamine raises the blood level of thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP), the
biologically active co-enzyme of thiamine.4*
Thiamine and its Co-enzyme, TPP
Thiamine (vitamin B1) plays an essential part in the metabolism of glucose,
through actions of it co-enzyme TPP (thiamine pyrophosphate).
TPP is formed by
the enzymatically-catalyzed addition of two phosphate groups donated by ATP to
thiamine. TPP also goes by the name "thiamine diphosphate." In the cytoplasm of
the cell, glucose, a 6-carbon sugar, is metabolized to pyruvic acid, which is
converted into acetyl-CoA, otherwise known as "active acetate." Acetyl CoA
enters the mitochondrion, where it serves as the starting substrate in the
Kreb’s cycle (citric acid cycle). The Krebs cycle is the primary source of
cellular metabolic energy. TPP, along with other co-enzymes, is essential for
the removal of CO2 from pyruvic acid, which in turn is a key step in the
conversion of pyruvic acid to acetyl CoA. CO2 removal from pyruvic acid is
called "oxidative decarboxylation," and for this reason, TPP was originally
referred to as "cocarboxylase." TPP is thus vital to the cell’s energy supply.
Benfotiamine helps maintain healthy cells in the presence of blood glucose.
Acting as a biochemical "super-thiamin," it does this through several different
cellular mechanisms, as discussed below.
Benfotiamine and Glucose Metabolism
Benfotiamine normalizes cellular processes fueled by glucose metabolites.*
As long as glucose remains at normal levels, excess glucose metabolites do not
accumulate within the cell. The bulk of the cell’s glucose supply is converted
to pyruvic acid, which serves as substrate for production of acetyl CoA, the
primary fuel for the Krebs cycle. Of the total amount of metabolic energy (in
the form of ATP) released from food, the Krebs cycle generates about 90
percent.5 In the presence of elevated glucose levels, the electron transport
chain, the final ATP-generating system in the mitochondrion, produces larger
than normal amounts of the oxygen free radical "superoxide." This excess
superoxide inhibits glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), a key enzyme
in the conversion of glucose to pyruvic acid, resulting in an excess of
intermediate metabolites known as "triosephosphates." Increase triosephophate
levels trigger several cellular mechanisms that result in potential damage to
vascular tissue. Cells particularly vulnerable to this biochemical dysfunction
are found in the retina, kidneys and nerves.
Benfotiamine has been shown to block three of these mechanisms: the hexosamine
pathway, the diaglycerol-protein kinase C pathway and the formation of Advanced
Glycation End-poducts. As discussed below, benfotiamine does this by activating
transketolase, a key thiamin-dependent enzyme.6
Benfotiamine stimulates transketolase, a cellular enzyme essential for
maintenance of normal glucose metabolic pathways.*
Transketolase diverts the excess fructose-6-phosphate and
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate, (formed by the inhibition of GAPDH, as mentioned
above), into production of pentose-5-phosphates and erythrose-4-phosphate and
away from the damaging pathways. Benfotiamine activates transketolase activity
in bovine aortic endothelial cells incubated in glucose.6 To test benfotiamine’s
ability to counteract these metabolic abnormalities caused by elevated blood
glucose, studies have been done in diabetic rats. Benfotiamine increases
transketolase activity in the retinas of diabetic rats, while concomitantly
decreasing hexosamine pathway activity, protein kinase C activity and AGE
formation.6
Benfotiamine and Protein glycation
Benfotiamine controls formation of Advanced Glycation End-products (AGEs).
AGEs have an affinity for proteins such as collagen, the major structural
protein in connective tissue. AGEs are formed through abnormal linkages between
proteins and glucose. This occurs via a non-enzymatic glycosylation reaction
similar to the "browning reaction" that takes place in stored food.7 At high
glucose concentrations, glucose attaches to lysine, forming a Schiff base, which
in turn forms "early glycosylation products." Once blood glucose levels return
to normal levels, the amount of these early glycosylation products decreases,
and they are not particularly harmful to most tissue proteins. On long-lived
proteins such as collagen, however, early glycosylation products are chemically
rearranged into the damaging Advanced Glycation End-products.
AGE formation on the collagen in coronary arteries causes increased vascular
permeability. This vessel "leakiness" allows for abnormal cross-linking between
plasma proteins and other proteins in the vessel wall, compromising vascular
function and potentially occluding the vessel lumen. A number of other
potentially harmful events may also occur, including production of cytokines
that further increase vascular permeability. Endothelin-1, a strong
vasoconstrictor, is over produced, increasing the possibility of thrombosis and
generation of oxygen free radicals is stimulated.8
It is vitally important to support normal glucose metabolic pathways so that
formation of AGEs is minimized. Benfotiamine, in the test tube (in vitro)
prevents AGE formation in endothelial cells cultured in high glucose by
decreasing the glucose metabolites that produce AGEs.9 Endothelial cells make up
the membranes that line the inner walls of organs and blood vessels. In a rat
study comparing the effects of Benfotiamine with water-soluble thiamin,
Benfotiamine inhibited AGE formation in diabetic rats while completely
preventing formation of "glycooxidation products," which are toxic by products
of chronic elevated blood glucose. AGE levels were not significantly altered by
thiamin.10 Benfotiamine also normalized nerve function in the animals. After
three months of administration, "nerve conduction velocity (NCV)," a measure of
nerve function, was increased by both benfotiamine and thiamin; at six months,
NCV was normalized by benfotiamine, whereas thiamin produced no further
increases in this parameter.
Dysfunctional glucose metabolic pathways leading to AGE formation occurs in
endothelial cells of the kidneys. In a recent animal study, benfotiamine was
administered to rats with elevated glucose levels. Benfotiamine increased
transketolase activity in the kidney filtration system of these rats, while at
the same time shifting triosephophates into the pentose pathway and preventing
protein leakage.11
Scientific References
1. Bitsch R, Wolf M, Möller J. Bioavailability assessment of the lipophilic
benfotiamine as compared to a water-soluble thiamin derivative. Ann Nutr Metab
1991;35(2):292-6.
2. Schreeb KH, Freudenthaler S, Vormfelde SV, et al. Comparative bioavailability
of two vitamin B1 preparations: benfotiamine and thiamine mononitrate. Eur J
Clin Pharmacol 1997; 52(4):319-20.
3. Loew D. Pharmacokinetics of thiamine derivatives especially of benfotiamine.
Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther 1996;34(2):47-50.
4. Frank T, Bitsch R, Maiwald J, Stein G. High thiamine diphosphate
concentrations in erythrocytes can be achieved in dialysis patients by oral
administration of benfontiamine. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 2000;56(3):251-7.
5. Pike RL, Brown ML. Nutrition, An Integrated Approach, 3rd Ed. New
York:MacMillan; 1986:467.
6. Hammes H-P, Du X, Edlestein D, et al. Benfotiamine blocks three major
pathways of hyperglycemic damage and prevents experimental diabetic neuropathy.
Nat Med 2003;9(3):294-99.
7. Monnier VM, Kohn RR, Cerami A. Accelerated age-related browning of human
collagen in diabetes mellitus. Proc Natl Acad Sci 1984;81(2):583-7.
8. Brownlee M. The pathological implications of protein glycation. Clin Invest
Med 1995;18(4):275-81.
9. Pomero F, Molinar Min A, La Selva M, et al. Benfotiamine is similar to
thiamine in correcting endothelial cell defects induced by high glucose. Acta
Diabetol 2001;38(3):135-8.
10. Stracke H, Hammes HP, Werkman D, et al. Efficacy of benfotiamine versus
thiamine on function and glycation products of peripheral nerves in diabetic
rats. Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 2001;109(6):300-6.
11. Babaei-Jadidi R, Karachalias N, Ahmed N, et al. Prevention of incipient
diabetic nephropathy by high-dose thiamine and benfotiamine. Diabetes
2003;52(8):2110-20.
12. Bergfeld R, MatsumaraT, Du X, Brownlee M. Benfotiamin prevents the
consequences of hyperglycemia induced mitochondrial overproduction of reactive
oxygen species and experimental diabetic neuropathy (Abstract) Diabetologia
2001; 44(Suppl1):A39.
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