Abstract

This review summarizes the impact of tocotrienols (TCTs) as antioxidants in minimizing
oxidative stress (OS), particularly in embryos exposed to OS causing agents. OS level is
increased, for example, by nicotine, a major alkaloid content in cigarette, which is also a source
of exogenous reactive oxygen species (ROS). Increased nicotine-induced OS increases cell
stress response, which is a common trigger leading to embryonic cell death. Having more
profound anti-oxidative stress effects than its counterpart tocopherol, TCTs improve blastocyst
implantation, foetal growth, pregnancy outcome and survival of the neonates affected by
nicotine. In reversing cell developmental arrest caused by nicotine-induced OS, TCTs enhances
PDK-1 expression in the P13K/Akt pathway and permit embryonic development beyond the 4-
cell stage with the production of more morulae. At the cytoskeletal level, TCTs increase the
number of nicotine-induced apoptotic cells, through caspase 8 activation in the mitochondria.
TCTs facilitate rough endoplasmic reticulum (rER) stress-mediated apoptosis and autophagy,
resulting from nicotine-induced OS. Reduced vesicular population in TCT supplemented
oocytes on the other hand may suggest reduced secretion of apoptotic cell bodies thus probably
minimizing vesicular apoptosis during oocyte maturation. Further extensive research is
required to develop TCTs as a tool in specific therapeutic approaches to overcome the
detrimental effects of OS.