Vitamin B6 Forms & Sources - Pyridoxine Powerhouse
- Vitamers (3 forms):
- Pyridoxine (PN): Plant origin.
- Pyridoxal (PL).
- Pyridoxamine (PM): Animal origin.
- All convert to phosphate esters (PNP, PLP, PMP).
- Active Coenzyme: Pyridoxal Phosphate (PLP).
⭐ Pyridoxal Phosphate (PLP) is the biologically active coenzyme form of Vitamin B6.

- Sources & RDA:
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Sources | Meat, fish, poultry, whole grains, vegetables |
| RDA (Adults) | 1.3-1.7 mg/day |
PLP Coenzyme Function - Amino Acid Ace
- Pyridoxal Phosphate (PLP): B6's active coenzyme, vital for amino acid (AA) metabolism.
- Mechanism: Schiff Base Cycle
- Internal Aldimine: PLP's aldehyde group + enzyme's Lysine residue: $\text{E-CHO} + \text{H}_2\text{N-Lys} \rightleftharpoons \text{E-CH=N-Lys} + \text{H}_2\text{O}$.
- External Aldimine: Incoming AA substrate displaces enzyme's Lysine: $\text{E-CH=N-Lys} + \text{R-CH(NH}_2\text{)-COOH} \rightleftharpoons \text{E-Lys-NH}_2 + \text{R-CH(COOH)-N=CH-PLP}$.
- Labilizes AA $\alpha$-carbon bonds, enabling diverse reactions.

- PLP-Dependent Reactions:
- Transamination
- Decarboxylation
- Racemization
- Deamination
- Side-chain modifications
⭐ The aldehyde group of PLP is the reactive part, forming a Schiff base with amino groups.
Transamination Mechanism & Significance - Amino Group Shuffle
-
General Reaction: Transfer of an amino group ($ ext{-NH}_2$) from an amino acid to an $\alpha$-keto acid, yielding a new amino acid and a new $\alpha$-keto acid. $\text{Amino Acid}_1 + \alpha\text{-Keto Acid}_2 \rightleftharpoons \alpha\text{-Keto Acid}_1 + \text{Amino Acid}_2$
-
Mechanism: 'Ping-pong bi-bi' reaction. PLP (Pyridoxal Phosphate) is the coenzyme.
- Enzyme-PLP + Amino Acid$_1$ $\rightarrow$ Enzyme-PMP + $\alpha$-Keto Acid$_1$. (PLP accepts $\text{-NH}_2$, forms PMP)
- Enzyme-PMP + $\alpha$-Keto Acid$_2$ $\rightarrow$ Enzyme-PLP + Amino Acid$_2$. (PMP donates $\text{-NH}_2$, regenerates PLP)

-
Key Transaminases (Aminotransferases):
Feature ALT (Alanine Aminotransferase/SGPT) AST (Aspartate Aminotransferase/SGOT) Reaction Alanine + $\alpha$-KG $\rightleftharpoons$ Pyruvate + Glutamate Aspartate + $\alpha$-KG $\rightleftharpoons$ OAA + Glutamate Tissue (Major) Liver (specific) Liver, Heart, Sk. Muscle, Kidney (Assorted) Clinical Sig. $\uparrow$ in liver damage (e.g., viral hepatitis) $\uparrow$ in liver/muscle damage, MI 📌 Mnemonic: ALT for Liver; AST for Several Tissues (Heart, Liver, Muscle). -
Metabolic Significance:
- Funneling amino groups to glutamate (for urea cycle or AA synthesis).
- Synthesis of non-essential amino acids.
- Role in gluconeogenesis (e.g., alanine $\rightarrow$ pyruvate).
-
Flowchart: Ping-Pong Bi-Bi Mechanism
⭐ All transamination reactions require PLP, and glutamate is a common product, acting as a collector of amino groups for disposal or reuse.
Vitamin B6 Clinical Aspects - Deficiency & Drama
- Deficiency Causes:
- Dietary inadequacy, chronic alcoholism.
- Drug interactions: 📌 "I Pee On Coins" (Isoniazid, Penicillamine, Oral Contraceptives, Cycloserine).
- Deficiency Manifestations:
- Skin: Seborrheic dermatitis-like rash, cheilosis, glossitis.
- Neurological: Peripheral neuropathy, irritability; convulsions in infants (due to impaired GABA synthesis).
- Hematological: Sideroblastic anemia (microcytic, hypochromic). *
- Diagnosis: Tryptophan load test (↑ urinary xanthurenic acid).
⭐ Isoniazid, an anti-tubercular drug, can induce Vitamin B6 deficiency by forming an inactive hydrazone complex with pyridoxal phosphate (PLP), leading to its functional inactivation and increased excretion.
- Toxicity:
- Sensory neuropathy with chronic high doses (> 200 mg/day).
- Therapeutic Uses:
- Prevention of INH-induced neuropathy (prophylactic dose 10-25 mg/day).
- Nausea and vomiting of pregnancy.
- Homocystinuria (pharmacological doses).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Vitamin B6 active form is Pyridoxal Phosphate (PLP).
- PLP is the key coenzyme for transamination reactions, crucial for amino acid metabolism.
- Aminotransferases (e.g., ALT, AST) are PLP-dependent; their levels indicate liver damage.
- Transamination involves transfer of an amino group from an amino acid to a keto acid.
- B6 deficiency leads to peripheral neuropathy, sideroblastic anemia, dermatitis, and seizures.
- Isoniazid can cause B6 deficiency by forming inactive complexes with PLP.
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