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Dietary Vitamin E Requirement for Optimum Immune Responses in the Rat

Adrianne Bendich, Edda Gabriel and Lawrence J. Machlin

Vitamins and Clinical Nutrition, Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc., 340 Kingsland Street, Nutley, NJ 07110

Supplementation of diets with vitamin E has been shown to enhance immune responses in numerous animal models. However, these experiments have not investigated the dietary requirement of vitamin E for optimal T- and B-lymphocyte mitogen responses and compared this directly with the requirement for growth, maintenance of spleen-body weight ratios, platelet count as well as prevention of myopathy and red blood cell lysis. We have found that male weanling rats maintain normal rate of growth and spleen-body weight ratio when fed purified diets containing 7.5 mg/kg vitamin E. A level of 15 mg/kg was adequate to prevent myopathy, and 50 mg/kg was necessary for the prevention of red blood cell hemolysis. The dietary requirement for optimum T- and B-lymphocyte responses to mitogens was greater than 50 mg/kg and was significantly correlated with plasma vitamin E levels over a range of 0.04–18 µg/ml. Thus, the requirement for this index of immune system activity was higher than for the other functional parameters of vitamin E adequacy measured. Therefore, the immune system responds to changes in dietary vitamin E well before there are signs of frank vitamin deficiency.


KEY WORDS: • vitamin E • immune response • lymphocyte response • mitogen response

Manuscript received 8 April 1985. Revision accepted 25 November 1985.




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The effect of vitamin e on common cold incidence is modified by age, smoking and residential neighborhood.
J. Am. Coll. Nutr., August 1, 2006; 25(4): 332 - 339.
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