Abstract

Objective: Selenium plays an important physiological role as component for antioxidant selenoproteins such as glutathione peroxidase (GPx). Since oxidative stress contributes to hypertension development, it is likely that selenium deficiency may contribute to the burden of cardiovascular disease. To better understand the involvement of selenium and GPx in the early development of cardiovascular disease, we investigated in young, healthy black and white African men and women whether measures of the micro- and macrovasculature are related to selenium and GPx activity.Methods: In young adults (N = 394; aged 20–30 years) we determined serum selenium, GPx activity, microvascular measures (central retinal artery equivalent, central retinal vein equivalent, arteriolar-to-venular ratio [AVR], and estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR]), and macrovascular measures (pulse wave velocity, 24-hour pulse pressure [PP] and augmentation index [Aix]).Results: In multivariable-adjusted regression analyses, there were vasculoprotective associations between serum selenium and a microvascular measure (AVR [β = 0.23; p = 0.036]) in black African women and with a macrovascular measure (24-hour PP [β = −0.15; p = 0.048]) in white African women. In turn, GPx activity also showed a protective association with a microvascular measure (eGFR) in white African men (β = 0.23; p = 0.035), as well as with macrovascular measures (AIx, PP) in the black (β = −0.25; p = 0.027) and white African men (β = −0.22; p = 0.035), and black African women (β = −0.32; p = 0.001).Conclusions: Collectively the findings suggest a protective role for the micronutrient selenium and GPx on both the micro- and macrovasculature in a young, healthy bi-ethnic population.

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