Gender-related differences in retinol and provitamin A carotenoid metabolism have previously been detected, with higher retinol concentrations in men, and on the contrary, higher β-carotene concentrations in women( Reference Faure and Preziosi 1 ). This reversed relationship suggests a higher β-carotene to retinol conversion rate in males( Reference Faure and Preziosi 1 ). Furthermore, lower conversion efficiency is correlated with BMI in women, but not in men( Reference Tang and Qin 2 ). We investigated retinol metabolism and β-carotene conversion efficiency in 23 female and 19 male volunteers by co-administering 2 mg [13C10]-β-carotene and 1 mg [13C10]-retinyl acetate. Relative absorption of β-carotene in the first 24 hours represented 11% of total ingested [13C10]-β-carotene, with an inter-individual coefficient of variation of 49%. [13C10]-β-carotene plasma concentration within the first 24 hours post-dose were significantly inversely related to the ability to convert β-carotene into retinyl-palmitate (r=−0.89; p<0.001). More importantly, significantly higher plasma concentrations of preformed [13C10]-retinol and bio-converted [13C5]-retinol were found in men compared to women (Figure 1), although plasma [13C10]-β-carotene concentrations were similar between the genders. Interestingly, differences in retinoid concentrations are independent from the ability to cleave [13C10]-β-carotene, since both retinyl palmitate/β-carotene and the newly-formed retinoid reference dose ratios are not significantly different between men and women (Figure 1).
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary-alt:20170609095208-70568-mediumThumb-S0029665113002425_fig1g.jpg?pub-status=live)
Fig. 1. Effect of gender on plasma retinol concentrations and provitamin A conversion efficiency (AUC=Area under the curve for the first 24 hours post-dose).
In summary, our isotope dilution technique revealed that men have higher circulating retinol concentrations compared to women, and that this difference is independent of provitamin A conversion efficiency. We hypothesize that a gender specific effect on metabolic flux between different tissues could explain this difference.
This work was supported by the BBSRC.