Title: L-Carnitine
1L-Carnitine
- The Science Behind an Important Functional
Nutrient for People and Pets
2Outline
- Introduction and history
- Food Science and Chemistry
- Roles of L-Carnitine in the body
- Thinking outside the box
- Summary
3Introduction and history
- L-Carnitine first discovered in 1905
- 1927 structure became more defined
- 1948 thought to be a B vitamin (Vitamin BT)
- its role in B oxidation became more understood
- 1962 established it to be L- Carnitine
- Years later much more learned
4Historical review of progress
Item Timeframe
On Mitochondria 1960s
Inflammation and connective tissue Late 60s-70s
Tumor and cancer cells Early 70s to date
Myopathies, cardiac failure 90s thru today
infants and feeding formulas Mid 90s
Aging, type 2 diabetes, chronic fatigue, Alzheimer's, performance Late 90s thru today
5Food Science and Chemistry
-
O
O
- Synonym Vitamin BT
- Reactive properties
- Molecular weight 161
- Hygroscopic
- Stability Thermostable (up to 395F)
- Toxicity Small, LD50 (rats) gt5 g/kg BW
- Approved AAFCO and FDA approved
C
C
H
H
C
H
O
H
C
H
H
N
CH
CH
3
3
CH
3
L-Carnitine
6Food Science and Chemistry
- Naturally synthesized
- Manufactured in liver kidneys but varies by
species - In dogs, liver is the only active organ
- In cats, both liver and kidney are active
- Starts with protein-bound Lysine and
S-adenosylmethionine - A 5-step process, typically last step is rate
limiting - to manufacture 1 g of LC requires 30 g of muscle
protein - requires vitamin C, niacin, vitamin B6 and iron
- In humans, 25 of L-carnitine needs met by
synthesis.
7Metabolic demands for L-Carnitine
- Can be divided into 3 categories
- Primary
- Secondary
- Functional shortage
- age dependent
- condition dependent
8Carnitine content of foods (mg/g)
- Muscle (lamb) - 2.03
- Muscle (beef) - 0.61
- Muscle (pig) - 0.27
- Heart (cattle) - 0.23
- Muscle (poultry)- 0.09
- Milk (cow) - 0.026
-
- Liver (lamb) - 0.022
- Salmon - 0.0006
- Rice - 0.018
- Eggs and peas - 0.008
- Potatoes - 0.0003
- Carrots/spinach - 0.000
adopted Heinz Loster 2003/Rigault 2007
9Total Carnitine, humans (umol/ml)
- Infants (3 kg)
- Skeletal muscle 1.98
- Liver 0.55
- Heart 0.77
- Plasma
- males 0.026
- females 0.023
- Adults (70 kg)
- Skeletal muscle 3.96
- Liver 2.90
- Heart 4.80
- Brain 0.30
-
10L-Carnitine in Pet Food
- Varies by type of ingredients
- foods of animal origin blended with other
ingredients - processing such boiling, soaked, washing
- freezing and/or drying
- Not understood is bioavailability of natural
forms of L-Carnitine - It matters bound vs free L-Carnitine
11L-Carnitine physiology and its role in energy
production
Cell
Mitochondria
Cytosol
12 L-Carnitine supplementation can influence
total metabolism
Pyruvate Carboxylase
Glycogen
? ß-oxidation
Fat L-Carnitine
Protein
Amino Acids
? BCAADH (leucine, iso,)
13Roles of L-Carnitine in the body
- Convert fat into energy.
- Helps manage weight loss in dogs and cats
- Cardio-vascular system
- Heart energy comes mostly from fat and
L-Carnitine - Antioxidant support
- Serves as an antioxidant
- Cognitive function
- cerebral absorption of Fat soluble vitamins
protect from oxidative decay - Maintaining muscle integrity
- provide blood flow to smooth muscles
14Human usage of L-Carnitine
- Large number of products entering the market
- Examples
- The amount of publications out per year
- Table
15Thinking outside the box
- Weight management
- other applications
16- Johnny Lopez, PhD
- Business Technical Manager
- johnny.lopez_at_lonza.com