Provitamin

A provitamin is a substance that may be converted within the body to a vitamin.[1] The term previtamin is a synonym.[2] For example, "Provitamin B5" is a name for panthenol, which may be converted in the body to vitamin B5 (pantothenic acid).

The term "provitamin" is used when it is desirable to label a substance with little or no vitamin activity, but which can be converted to an active form by normal metabolic processes. For example, "provitamin A" is a name for β-carotene,[1] which has only about 1/6 the biological activity of retinol (vitamin A); the body uses an enzyme to convert β-carotene to retinol. In other contexts, both β-carotene and retinol are simply considered to be different forms (vitamers) of vitamin A.

Provitamin D2 is ergosterol, and provitamin D3 is 7-dehydrocholesterol.[1] Menadione is a synthetic provitamin of vitamin K.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.