Abstract

The present work studied the effects of ascorbic acid supplementation (1 mg/ml in water daily) on submucosal vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-immunoreactive (VIP-IR) neurons in the jejunum of aging rats. Twenty-five male rats were divided into the following groups: Y90 (young, 90-day-old rats), A345 (aged, 345-day-old rats), A428 (aged, 428-day-old rats), AA345 (ascorbic acid-supplemented rats, 90–345-day old), and AA428 (ascorbic acid-supplemented rats, 90–428-day old). Whole mounts of the submucosal layer were subjected to immunohistochemistry for determination of VIP-IR. Morphometric analyses were carried out in 100 submucosal VIP-IR neuron cell bodies from each group. At 345 days, neurons from supplemented animals were larger than those of non-supplemented animals of the same age. These results indicate that ascorbic acid neutralized free radicals and played a neuroprotective role. At 428 days, no significant differences between cell body areas were seen with or without ascorbic acid supplementation, indicating that, from a certain age onward, the role of ascorbic acid as a VIP-IR antioxidant was reduced. This supposition is supported by the fact that both supplemented and non-supplemented animals had higher blood concentrations of ascorbic acid on Day 428 compared with Day 345. The possible neuroprotective and neurodegenerative effects of ascorbic acid appear to depend on the age of the animals, dose, and its interaction with other antioxidants.

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