πŸ§ͺ Biochemistry · Vitamins & Cofactors

Vitamin tricks that make deficiencies stick

Fat and water-soluble vitamins and deficiency mnemonics β€” mastered.

πŸ’Š Vitamins

Memory tricks

Proven mnemonics — fast to learn, hard to forget.

Water-Soluble Vitamins
Water-soluble: B vitamins + C β€” excess is urinated out safely
Water-Soluble Vitamins
Eight B vitamins plus vitamin C β€” not stored, need regular intake
B1 thiamine, B2 riboflavin (FAD), B3 niacin (NAD⁺), B5 pantothenic acid (CoA), B6 pyridoxine, B7 biotin, B9 folate (DNA synthesis), B12 cobalamin (myelin, RBC). C: collagen synthesis.
Vitamin C and Scurvy
Vitamin C deficiency = scurvy: bleeding gums, poor wound healing (collagen fails)
Vitamin C and Scurvy
Vitamin C is essential for collagen hydroxylation
Without vitamin C, proline and lysine residues can't be hydroxylated β†’ unstable collagen β†’ bleeding gums, poor wound healing, bruising, joint pain. Killed sailors on long voyages before citrus was understood.
Vitamin D Deficiency
Vitamin D deficiency: rickets (children β€” bowed bones), osteomalacia (adults)
Vitamin D Deficiency
Vitamin D is needed for calcium absorption β€” deficiency weakens bones
Made in skin from UV-B sunlight. Deficiency: rickets in children (soft, bowing bones), osteomalacia in adults (soft bones, pain). Also linked to immune dysfunction and depression. Common in northern latitudes.
Folate and B12
Folate (B9): DNA synthesis and repair β€” deficiency causes neural tube defects and megaloblastic anemia
Folate and B12
Two B vitamins that work together β€” deficiency in either causes anemia
Folate: required for nucleotide synthesis (DNA building blocks). Deficiency in early pregnancy β†’ neural tube defects. B12: required for myelin synthesis and folate metabolism. Deficiency: megaloblastic anemia, neurological damage.
Thiamine β€” Vitamin B1
B1 thiamine: energy metabolism cofactor. Deficiency = beriberi (peripheral neuropathy) or Wernicke's (alcoholics)
Thiamine β€” Vitamin B1
The vitamin that alcoholics most commonly lack
Thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP): cofactor for pyruvate dehydrogenase, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, transketolase. Beriberi: dry (peripheral neuropathy, muscle weakness), wet (heart failure, edema). Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome: alcoholics β€” Wernicke's (confusion, ataxia, eye movement issues) β†’ Korsakoff's (irreversible memory loss).
Riboflavin β€” Vitamin B2
B2 riboflavin: component of FAD and FMN β€” electron carriers in ETC. Deficiency = ariboflavinosis (cracks at corners of mouth)
Riboflavin β€” Vitamin B2
The vitamin whose deficiency causes characteristic mouth sores
Riboflavin forms FAD (flavin adenine dinucleotide) and FMN (flavin mononucleotide) β€” electron carriers in the electron transport chain. Deficiency (ariboflavinosis): angular cheilitis (cracks at corners of mouth), glossitis (inflamed tongue), seborrheic dermatitis. Rare in isolation β€” usually with other B vitamin deficiencies.
Niacin β€” Vitamin B3
B3 niacin: component of NAD⁺ and NADP⁺. Deficiency = pellagra β€” 4 Ds: Diarrhea, Dermatitis, Dementia, Death
Niacin β€” Vitamin B3
The vitamin whose deficiency causes pellagra
Niacin forms NAD⁺ and NADP⁺ β€” critical electron carriers in metabolism. Pellagra: the 4 Ds β€” Diarrhea, Dermatitis (sun-sensitive rash on exposed skin), Dementia, Death. Historically common where corn was the dietary staple (niacin in corn is bound form). High-dose niacin: raises HDL, lowers triglycerides.
Cobalamin β€” Vitamin B12
B12 cobalamin: needs intrinsic factor for absorption. Deficiency = pernicious anemia + subacute combined degeneration
Cobalamin β€” Vitamin B12
The vitamin that requires a specialized carrier for absorption
B12 requires intrinsic factor (from gastric parietal cells) for absorption in ileum. Pernicious anemia: autoimmune destruction of parietal cells β†’ no intrinsic factor β†’ B12 deficiency. Subacute combined degeneration of spinal cord: B12 deficiency damages posterior and lateral spinal columns. Vegans at risk β€” B12 only in animal products.
Vitamin A
Vitamin A (retinol): vision (rhodopsin), immune function, epithelial integrity. Deficiency = night blindness.
Vitamin A
Fat-soluble vitamin essential for vision and epithelial health
Retinal (from retinol): component of rhodopsin β€” visual pigment in rod cells. Retinoic acid: regulates gene expression, epithelial differentiation. Deficiency: night blindness (earliest sign), xerophthalmia (dry eyes), increased infection susceptibility. Toxicity: teratogenic in pregnancy (liver, isotretinoin).
Vitamin K
Vitamin K: essential for blood clotting factors II VII IX X. Warfarin works by blocking vitamin K recycling.
Vitamin K
The clotting vitamin β€” and the target of anticoagulant drugs
Vitamin K: cofactor for gamma-carboxylation of clotting factors II (prothrombin), VII, IX, X, and anticoagulant proteins C and S. K1 (phylloquinone): green leafy vegetables. K2 (menaquinone): bacteria, fermented foods. Warfarin: inhibits vitamin K epoxide reductase β†’ can't recycle vitamin K β†’ reduced clotting factor activity.
Essential Mineral Cofactors
Mineral cofactors: zinc (wound healing, immune, taste), iron (hemoglobin, ETC), iodine (thyroid hormones), calcium (bones, signaling)
Essential Mineral Cofactors
Four essential minerals and their key biochemical roles
Zinc: 300+ enzymes, wound healing, immune function, taste and smell, DNA synthesis. Deficiency: growth retardation, impaired immunity, hypogeusia. Iron: hemoglobin (Oβ‚‚ transport), myoglobin, cytochromes. Iodine: thyroid hormones T3/T4 β€” deficiency causes goiter, hypothyroidism, cretinism. Calcium: bones/teeth, muscle contraction, nerve signaling, second messenger.
Zinc
300+ enzymes, immunity, wound healing
Iron
Hemoglobin, ETC
Iodine
Thyroid hormones T3/T4
Calcium
Bones, muscle, nerve signaling