Vitamin A: too good to be bad?

Front Pharmacol. 2023 May 22:14:1186336. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2023.1186336. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Vitamin A is a micronutrient important for vision, cell growth, reproduction and immunity. Both deficiency and excess consuming of vitamin A cause severe health consequences. Although discovered as the first lipophilic vitamin already more than a century ago and the definition of precise biological roles of vitamin A in the setting of health and disease, there are still many unresolved issues related to that vitamin. Prototypically, the liver that plays a key role in the storage, metabolism and homeostasis of vitamin A critically responds to the vitamin A status. Acute and chronic excess vitamin A is associated with liver damage and fibrosis, while also hypovitaminosis A is associated with alterations in liver morphology and function. Hepatic stellate cells are the main storage site of vitamin A. These cells have multiple physiological roles from balancing retinol content of the body to mediating inflammatory responses in the liver. Strikingly, different animal disease models also respond to vitamin A statuses differently or even opposing. In this review, we discuss some of these controversial issues in understanding vitamin A biology. More studies of the interactions of vitamin A with animal genomes and epigenetic settings are anticipated in the future.

Keywords: hepatic stellate cell; hypervitaminosis A; hypovitaminosis A; liver; retinol; vitamin.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

The laboratory of RW is funded by the German Research Foundation (grants WE2554/13-1, WE2554/15-1, WE 2554/17-1) and a grant from the Interdisciplinary Centre for Clinical Research within the faculty of Medicine at the RWTH Aachen University (grant PTD 1-5). The laboratory of GC had been funded by grants (#466, 492, and 492B) from the Diabetes Action Research and Education Foundation.