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Two Distinct Faces of Vitamin C: AA vs. DHA

Luciano Ferrada, Rocío Magdalena, María José Barahona, Eder Ramírez, Cristian Sanzana, José L. Gutiérrez, Francisco Nualart

2021Antioxidants33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Historically, vitamin C has been associated with many regulatory processes that involve specific signaling pathways. Among the most studied signaling pathways are those involved in the regulation of aging, differentiation, neurotransmission, proliferation, and cell death processes in cancer. This wide variety of regulatory effects is due to the fact that vitamin C has a dual mechanism of action. On the one hand, it regulates the expression of genes associated with proliferation (Ccnf and Ccnb1), differentiation (Sox-2 and Oct-4), and cell death (RIPK1 and Bcl-2). At the same time, vitamin C can act as a regulator of kinases, such as MAPK and p38, or by controlling the activation of the NF-kB pathway, generating chronic responses related to changes in gene expression or acute responses associated with the regulation of signal transduction processes. To date, data from the literature show a permanent increase in processes regulated by vitamin C. In this review, we critically examine how vitamin C regulates these different cellular programs in normal and tumor cells.

Topics & Concepts

RIPK1Signal transductionRegulatorCell biologyp38 mitogen-activated protein kinasesKinaseBiologyRegulation of gene expressionCellular differentiationProgrammed cell deathNecroptosisTranscription factorMAPK/ERK pathwayGeneBiochemistryApoptosisVitamin C and Antioxidants ResearchVitamin D Research StudiesVitamin K Research Studies
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