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The Hindu
The Hindu
National
Afshan Yasmeen

Study finds Vitamin B12 absorption is not just in the small intestine but also in the human colon

A recent study by researchers from St. John’s Medical College in Bengaluru and Sitaram Bhartia Institute of Health and Research in New Delhi has dispelled a decades-long dogma regarding the absorption of Vitamin B12 in humans. Using an innovative method to measure the bioavailability of this important micronutrient, the researchers found that absorption is not just in the small intestine but also occurs in the large intestine.

The study was published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition last month.

Vitamin B12 (whose recommended daily amount is 2.4 micrograms in adults) is only found in animal-based foods like meat, milk, or eggs. Its intake is thought to be low in India. Consequently, it was thought that the prevalence of this micronutrient deficiency should be extraordinarily high in India. However, recent national surveys like the Comprehensive National Nutrition Survey, which evaluated children under 19 years of age, have found the prevalence of Vitamin B12 deficiency to be much lower than anticipated, at a maximum of 30% in adolescents, and lower at younger ages.

Anura Kurpad, professor of Physiology at St John’s Medical College, and lead author of the study, said that the lower than anticipated prevalence of deficiency despite low intakes suggested that we may have not got the physiology of Vitamin B12 absorption correct.

Vitamin B12 test

“To investigate this, we needed to accurately measure and characterise the B12 absorption and its daily excretion in Indians. For the former, the only available technique globally was the use of radioactively labelled Vitamin B12. This molecule is used to measure if B12 is absorbed in patients, in a testing method called the Schilling test. It has been used for the last 70 years, but its use has been restricted now for ethical reasons, because a radioactive substance was used. The way forward was to start afresh and synthesise a Vitamin B12 molecule that was labelled by a safe stable isotope (these are found normally in our body),” he said. 

For this, a team led by Sarita Devi, a biotechnologist from St. John’s, biosynthesised a novel stable-isotope labelled Vitamin B12 molecule using a bacterial culture, to enable human absorption studies to be conducted safely, he said.

“Presently, Vitamin B12 is thought to be absorbed only in the terminal part (ileum) of the small intestine through specific receptors. In testing this, the intestinal absorption kinetics of the labelled molecule showed major absorption as expected from the small intestine (about 50%). However, there was a ‘later phase’ absorption (about 10%) that possibly occurred in the large intestine (colon). This goes against the prevailing dogma that Vitamin B12 is absorbed only in the small intestine, with no absorption from the large intestine,” Dr. Kurpad explained. 

Colonoscopy

To further confirm this, Shalini Hegde and Mallikarjun Patil - researchers from St John’s - directly measured Vitamin B12 absorption from the large intestine during colonoscopy, to convincingly prove that colonic B12 absorption did occur in humans. “They found that there was a capacity to absorb at least 0.4 microgram, or about 25% of the prevailing daily B12 requirement. The excretion kinetics of the labeled Vitamin B12 from the body, that was measured over one month, showed that the daily vitamin loss was not as high as earlier thought. This suggested that the daily requirement (as a replacement for the loss) could be lower than previously thought,” he said. 

Harshpal Singh Sachdev, from Sitaram Bhartia Institute who is one of the authors said these findings could explain why Vitamin B12 deficiency is not as profound as expected despite the low intakes in India.

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