Vitamin C Fundamentals - Ascorbate Ace
- Chemical Name: L-Ascorbic acid; water-soluble hexose derivative.
- Sources: Citrus fruits, amla (richest), guava, bell peppers, broccoli.
- RDA (Adults): 75-90 mg/day. Smokers: +35 mg/day. ↑ in pregnancy, lactation.
- Absorption: Active transport (SVCT1/2) in distal small intestine; saturable. Bioavailability ↓ with high doses.
- Key Property: Potent antioxidant (electron donor).
- 📌 Citrus, Capsicum, Cabbage for Vitamin C.

⭐ Scurvy manifests when plasma ascorbate levels fall below 0.2 mg/dL (total body pool < 300 mg).
Vitamin C's Mechanism - Redox Powerhouse
- Primary Function: Potent water-soluble reducing agent and antioxidant.
- Electron Donor: Sequentially donates two electrons (2e⁻) and protons (2H⁺).
- Ascorbic acid $\rightleftharpoons$ Semidehydroascorbate radical $\rightleftharpoons$ Dehydroascorbic acid (DHA).
- Cofactor Role: Essential for enzymes requiring reduced metal ions.
- Maintains iron (Fe²⁺) and copper (Cu⁺) in their active, reduced states for hydroxylases and oxygenases.
- Critical for prolyl hydroxylase & lysyl hydroxylase (collagen synthesis).
- Regeneration: DHA is reduced back to ascorbic acid, often by glutathione systems.
- 📌 Mnemonic: "Vitamin C: Cofactor, Collagen, Corrects Fe³⁺ to Fe²⁺."
⭐ Vitamin C's ability to keep iron in the ferrous (Fe²⁺) state is paramount for the function of dioxygenases like prolyl and lysyl hydroxylases, vital for stable collagen.
Collagen Formation - The C Link
Vitamin C (Ascorbate) is vital for post-translational hydroxylation of proline and lysine in procollagen within the ER, critical for collagen's structural integrity.
- Mechanism: Vitamin C, a coenzyme, keeps iron (Fe) in prolyl/lysyl hydroxylases in its active, reduced ferrous ($Fe^{2+}$) state.
- Hydroxyproline (Hyp): Crucial for H-bonds stabilizing the collagen triple helix.
- Hydroxylysine (Hyl): Sites for O-glycosylation (galactose/glucose); essential for intermolecular covalent cross-links, enhancing tensile strength.
- Deficiency (Scurvy): ↓ Vit C → under-hydroxylated, unstable collagen → weakened connective tissue (bleeding gums, poor wound healing, capillary fragility). 📌 No C, No Collagen Stability.
⭐ The primary biochemical defect in scurvy is impaired proline and lysine hydroxylation, leading to structurally unsound collagen unable to form stable fibers.
![Image showing prolyl hydroxylase enzyme with Vitamin C and Fe2+ cofactors acting on a procollagen strand in ER]
Scurvy Manifestations - Connective Crisis
- Impaired hydroxylation of proline & lysine → unstable collagen → systemic connective tissue failure.
- Gums: Spongy, friable, bleeding, receding; eventual tooth loss.
- Skin: Petechiae, ecchymoses, perifollicular hemorrhages (classic).
- Hair: "Corkscrew" or "swan-neck" deformities.
- Wound Healing: Significantly delayed; old scars may break down.
- Musculoskeletal: Arthralgia, hemarthrosis; subperiosteal hemorrhage (severe pain, esp. in children).
- Children: Scorbutic rosary (costochondral junction enlargement), pithed-frog posture (due to pain).
⭐ Corkscrew hairs and perifollicular hemorrhages are highly characteristic cutaneous signs of scurvy due to capillary fragility an_d impaired collagen support around hair follicles_
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Vitamin C (Ascorbic acid) is indispensable for post-translational modification of collagen.
- It acts as a cofactor for prolyl and lysyl hydroxylases, enabling hydroxylation of proline and lysine residues in procollagen.
- Hydroxyproline and hydroxylysine are essential for stable collagen triple helix formation and subsequent interchain cross-linking.
- Deficiency leads to Scurvy, characterized by impaired wound healing, bleeding gums, and capillary fragility due to defective collagen synthesis.
- This crucial hydroxylation step occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)_
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