| Literature DB >> 26000293 |
Marco Ardesia1, Guido Ferlazzo2, Walter Fries3.
Abstract
Vitamin D deficiency has been recognized as an environmental risk factor for Crohn's disease since the early 80s. Initially, this finding was correlated with metabolic bone disease. Low serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels have been repeatedly reported in inflammatory bowel diseases together with a relationship between vitamin D status and disease activity. Subsequently, low serum vitamin D levels have been reported in various immune-related diseases pointing to an immunoregulatory role. Indeed, vitamin D and its receptor (VDR) are known to interact with different players of the immune homeostasis by controlling cell proliferation, antigen receptor signalling, and intestinal barrier function. Moreover, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D is implicated in NOD2-mediated expression of defensin-β2, the latter known to play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of Crohn's disease (IBD1 gene), and several genetic variants of the vitamin D receptor have been identified as Crohn's disease candidate susceptibility genes. From animal models we have learned that deletion of the VDR gene was associated with a more severe disease. There is a growing body of evidence concerning the therapeutic role of vitamin D/synthetic vitamin D receptor agonists in clinical and experimental models of inflammatory bowel disease far beyond the role of calcium homeostasis and bone metabolism.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26000293 PMCID: PMC4427008 DOI: 10.1155/2015/470805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Potential involvement of vitamin D in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease and immunologic effects of vitamin-D-related therapeutic approaches. Scenario A: reduced UV exposure as risk factor for CD and for hospitalizations and surgery [86]; Scenario B: NOD2 gene transcription is stimulated by 1,25(OH)2D3/VDR and signaling through NOD2 induces expression of DEFB2/HBD2 which stands for beta-defensin 2 and cathelicidin [20]; Scenarios C and D: variants or loss of function of VDR may lead to changes of the microbiota and reduce host defense by reducing production of cathelicidin, lysozyme, and ATG16L1 protein (autophagy) [21, 22]; Scenario E: experimental studies with vitamin D or its analogues showing inhibitory effects on PBMC, LPMC, dendritic cells, and fibroblasts in terms of cytokine production and differentiation (Table 3). VDR: vitamin D receptor; NOD: nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain.
Genetic polymorphisms and IBD (chronological order).
| Author | Year | Population | Investigated gene polymorphisms | Main findings |
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| Simmons et al. [ | 2000 | England 158 UC, 245 CD, | VDR: TaqI, ApaI, FokI | TaqI polymorphism (“tt” genotype) more frequent in CD compared to UC or controls |
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| Martin et al. [ | 2002 | Germany, 95 CD, 93 UC, 119 HC | VDR: TaqI | TaqI (“tt” genotype) significantly more frequent in fistulizing and stenosing CD |
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| Dresner-Pollak et al. [ | 2004 | Israel, 228 CD (129 Ashkenazi and 99 non-Ashkenazi), 151 UC (72 Ashkenazi, 79 non-Ashkenazi), 495 HC (352 non-Ashkenazi and 143 Ashkenazi) | VDR: BsmI | BB genotype more frequent in Ashkenazi UC compared to Ashkenazi HC |
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| Noble et al. [ | 2008 | United Kingdom, 286 CD, 154 UC, 240 HC | VDR: TaqI, ApaI | Overall no differences between CD, UC, and HC for TaqI and ApaI. TaqI variants more frequent in male IBD patients compared to (male) HC |
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| Naderi et al. [ | 2008 | Iran, 150 UC, 80 CD, 150 HC | VDR: ApaI, TaqI, BsmI, FokI | FokI polymorphism significantly higher in UC and CD. Frequency of polymorphic “f” allele and f/f genotype higher in UC and CD comparing with HC |
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| Pluskiewicz et al. [ | 2009 | Poland, 47 UC, 47 HC | VDR: TaqI, BsmI, ApaI | No differences between UC and HC |
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| Hughes et al. [ | 2011 | Ireland, 660 IBD, 699 HC | VDR: ApaI, TaqI, BsmI, FokI | Borderline significance for heterozygous carriage of the FokI allele |
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| Pei et al. [ | 2011 | China, 218 UC, 251 HC | VDR: ApaI, TaqI, BsmI, FokI | Only Bb genotype of the BsmI variant associated with UC; frequency of the BsmI polymorphic allele (B) increased in UC |
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| Eloranta et al. [ | 2011 | Switzerland, 404 CD, 232 UC, 248 HC | DBP: rs 7041, rs 4588 | Significantly reduced frequency of the 420 variant Lys in IBD compared to controls |
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| Bentley et al. [ | 2011 | New Zealand, 449 CD, 448 UC, 482 HC | VDR: FokI, TaqI | No overall differences, only a higher minor allele frequency for TaqI, in male CD and UC compared to HC |
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| Luo et al. [ | 2013 | China, 19 CD, 122 HC | VDR: ApaI, TaqI, BsmI | No significant differences in the frequencies of TaqI, BsmI, and ApaI polymorphisms |
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| Xia et al. [ | 2014 | China 382 UC, 489 HC | VDR: ApaI, TaqI, BsmI, FokI | No difference between UC and HC. The mutant allele C and genotype TC + CC of FokI were significantly increased in patients with mild and moderate UC compared to severe UC. The frequency of AAC haplotype was statistically lower in UC than HC (AAC haplotype formed by the VDR BsmI, ApaI, and TaqI gene might engender a reduced risk of UC attack) |
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| Meta-analyses | ||||
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| Xue et al. [ | 2013 | ApaI: 1024 CD, 974 UC, 1551 HC | VDR: ApaI, TaqI, BsmI, FokI | FokI “ff” genotype associated with a significant risk for UC in Asians; TaqI “tt” genotype associated with an increased risk for CD in Europeans and with an increased risk for CD and UC in Asian males. ApaI “a” allele confers protection from CD |
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| Wang et al. [ | 2014 | ApaI: 940 CD, 962 UC, 1468 HC | VDR: ApaI, TaqI, BsmI, FokI | ApaI, BsmI, and FokI are not significantly associated with IBD. Significant association between TaqI polymorphism and IBD risk. |
CD: Crohn's disease; UC: ulcerative colitis; CRADC: cadaveric renal allograft donor controls; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; IBD: inflammatory bowel disease; HC: healthy controls; DBP: vitamin-D-binding protein; VDR: vitamin D receptor.
*Article in Chinese.
Vitamin D versus disease activity and outcome in IBD (chronological order).
| Author | Year | Population | Methodology | Main findings |
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| Harries et al. [ | 1985 | U.S.A | Single-center cohort; CD divided into 2 groups (undernourished and well nourished); 2 control groups: 20 well-nourished UC and 9 HC | 25(OH)D3 significantly lower in CD with active disease versus inactive disease ( |
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| Tajika et al. [ | 2004 | Japan | Single-center cohort; 25(OH)D3 and disease activity assessed by CDAI and IOIBD score | Serum 25(OH)D3 significantly related to disease duration ( |
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| Joseph et al. [ | 2009 | India | Single-center cohort; disease activity evaluated by HBI in CD | Serum 25(OH)D3 in CD significantly lower versus controls ( |
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| Nakajima et al. [ | 2011 | Japan | Single-center cohort; disease activity measured using CAI/CDAI scores | No decrease 1,25(OH)2D3 in CD with high CDAI |
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| Ulitsky et al. [ | 2011 | U.S.A. | Single-center cohort; retrospective observational study | 25(OH)D3 deficiency significantly associated with lower SIBDQ ( |
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| El-Matary et al. [ | 2011 | Canada | Cross-sectional pediatric study. Disease activity measured by PCDAI e PUCAI | No correlation between PCDAI and serum 25(OH)D3. Marginal evidence against the null hypothesis ( |
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| Hassan et al. [ | 2013 | Iran | Cross-sectional study. Disease activity measured by CDAI and Truelove index | Serum vit D lower in active versus inactive disease (non significantly). VitD deficiency was not associated with IBD activity (also considering CD and UC separately), however was associated with a history of IBD related intestinal surgery |
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| Ananthakrishnan et al. [ | 2013 | U.S.A. | Multicenter cohort; 25(OH)D3: Normal (>30 ng/mL), Insufficient (20–29.9 ng/mL) or | IBD-related surgery: CD: 10% patients never vitamin D deficient versus 13% vitamin D insufficient versus 17% vitamin D deficient. UC: vitamin D deficiency associated with elevated risk of surgery and hospitalization with effect similar to CD; no statistical significance in patients vitamin D insufficient. |
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| Zator et al. [ | 2014 | U.S.A. | Retrospective single-center cohort; patients on anti-TNF therapy evaluated for loss of response; 25(OH)D3 insufficiency: <30 ng/mL | Patients with insufficient vitamin D demonstrated earlier cessation of anti-TNF- |
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| Ananthakrishnan et al. [ | 2014 | U.S.A. | Retrospective multi-center analysis of 25(OH)D3 in 35 patients who developed CDI | 25(OH)D3 level was significantly lower in IBD who developed CDI compared to non-CDI-IBD ( |
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| Ham et al. [ | 2014 | U.S.A. | Prospectively collected samples for 25(OH)D3 analysis; assessment of HBI and CRP | 25(OH)D3 levels lower in patients with active disease versus inactive disease, 25(OH)D3 correlated with HBI (not with CRP) |
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| Garg et al. [ | 2013 | Australia | Assessment of 25(OH)D3, fecal calprotectin and CRP | Inverse correlation between serum 25(OH)D3 and fecal calprotectin in CD and UC patients, but not with CRP |
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| Hlavaty et al. [ | 2014 | Slovakia | SIBDQ assessment in vitamin D sufficient or -deficient patients and in vitamin supplement (800 IU/day for 3 months) patients | SIBDQ was significantly better in vitamin D-sufficient patients; |
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| Govani et al. [ | 2015 | U.S.A. | Retrospective, national, analysis of UV exposure and inpatient surgery risk | UV exposure protective for inpatients surgery |
Abbreviations: CD: Crohn's disease; UC: ulcerative colitis; HC: healthy controls; IBS: irritable bowel syndrome; IBD: inflammatory bowel disease; CDAI: Crohn's Disease Activity Index; IOIBD: international organization for the study of inflammatory bowel disease score; CAI: Lichtiger's clinical activity index; 25(OH)D3: 25-Hydroxycholecalciferol; 1,25(OH)2D3: 1,25dihydroxycholecalciferol; SIBDQ: Short IBD Questionnaire; HBI: Harvey-Bradshaw index; UCDI: Ulcerative colitis disease activity index; HRQOL: health-related quality of life; PCDAI: pediatric Crohn's disease activity index; PUCAI: pediatric ulcerative colitis activity index; CDI: Clostridium difficile infection; CRP: C-reactive protein; UV: ultraviolet; TNF: tumor necrosis factor; PBMC: peripheral blood mononuclear cells; Cyp: Cyp27b1 gene; VDR: vitamin D receptor.
Therapeutic studies in experimental and human IBD (chronological order).
| Author | Year | Species/cells | Investigational agent | Methodology | Main findings |
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| Cantorna et al. [ | 2000 | IL-10 KO mice | 1,25(OH)2D3 p.o. | Exp. 1. Vit. D-deficient IL-10 KO mice versus vit. D-sufficient mice (treated with cholecalciferol); | Vitamin D sufficiency prevents enterocolitis in IL-10 KO mice up to 13 weeks; 1,25(OH)2D3 treatment ameliorates inflammation |
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Daniel et al. [ | 2006 | BALB/c mice | TNBS colitis; 22-ene-25-oxa-vitamin D (ZK156979) i.p. | Treatment with ZK156979 versus 1,25(OH)2D3 before or after induction of colitis with TNBS; investigation of tissue MPO, TNF- | ZK156979 versus 1,25(OH)2D3 prevents or ameliorates TNBS colitis decreasing pro-inflammatory and increasing anti-inflammatory cytokines |
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| Laverny et al. [ | 2010 | C57BL/6 mice | DSS-colitis, 1 | Daily administration of BXL-62 versus 1,25(OH)2D3; | Higher potency of BXL-62 versus 1,25(OH)2D3 in reducing tissue inflammation |
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| Verlinden et al. [ | 2013 | C57BL/6 mice | DSS- colitis 1 | Histological examination; measurement of transcript levels of cytokines (IL-1, IL-6, IFN- | TX527 reduced “clinical” disease scores and attenuated histological scores, downregulation of transcript levels of inflammatory cytokines |
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| Ooi et al. [ | 2013 | C57BL/6 mice | 1,25(OH)2D3 p.o. | DSS colitis; characterization of gut microbiota, and | Lower expression of E cadherin and tolerogenic macrophages |
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| Wu et al. [ | 2014 | Conditional VDR KO and IL-10 KO mice | DSS colitis | VDR KO: colitis evaluation, pyrosequencing for microbiota, Paneth cells, lysozyme production, autophagy | Conditional VDR KO mice: worse colitis, increased |
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| Tao et al. [ | 2014 | C57BL/6 mice | TNBS-colitis | At week 14, assessment of ECM and total collagen production, together with determination in isolated colonic SEMF, of expression of VDR, | Histological scoring, ECM, and collagen production in the colon reduced in vitamin D supplemented mice; in SEMF decreased levels of TGF- |
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| Assa et al. [ | 2015 | Caco cells | DSS- colitis | Caco cells incubated with or w/o 1,25(OH)2D3 challenged with AIEC | 1,25(OH)2D3 protects Caco cells against AIEC induced loss of TER and TJ protein redistribution |
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| Stio et al. [ | 2007 | 4 CD and 4 HC | TX 527 [19-nor-14,20-bisepi-23-yne-1,25(OH)2D3], Vitamin D analogue | Single-center, | TX 527 inhibits TNF- |
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| Miheller et al. [ | 2009 | 37 CD | Group A treated with aVD versus group B treated with pVD | Single-center study; evaluation of bone parameters and CDAI, CRP, and SIBDQ after 6, 12, 52 weeks | In aVD, after 6 weeks (but not at 52 weeks) a significant reduction of CDAI, IBDQ, and CRP together with a significant change of bone parameters |
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| Ardizzone et al. [ | 2009 | 9 UC, 8 CD | 1,25(OH)2D3 | Single-center | In UC PBMC 1,25(OH)2D3 reduced IFN- |
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| Jørgensen et al. [ | 2010 | 94 CD | Vitamin D3 versus placebo | Multi-center randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study; | Vit. D3 significantly increased |
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| Bendix-Struve et al. [ | 2010 | 108 CD | Vitamin D3 versus placebo | Randomized, placebo-controlled, clinical trial | Vit. D3 treatment of CD patients increased the IL-6 levels and enhance the CD4+ T-cell proliferation |
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| Laverny et al. [ | 2010 | 22 CD, 21 UC | 1 |
| Higher anti-inflammatory potency compared to 1,25(OH)2D3 demonstrated by the significantly more potent inhibition in PBMC and in LPMCs of the proinflammatory cytokines TNF- |
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| Yang et al. [ | 2013 | 18 CD | Vitamin D3 | Open-label prospective clinical trial over 24 weeks, multi-center study; vitamin D3 at 1000 IU/day; dose increase every two week of 1000 IU/day up to 5000 IU/day to achieve serum 25(OH)D3 >40 ng/mL | Vit. D3 supplementation significantly raised serum 25(OH)D3, reduced CDAI scores, and improved IBDQ scores |
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| Bartels et al. [ | 2014 | 10 CD | Vitamin D3 | Single-center study, oral vitamin D supplementation (or placebo) and assessment of maturation marker expression and cytokine production of monocyte-derived dendritic cells | Dendritic cells from vitamin supplemented CD patients exhibited reduced expression of CD80 and reduced production of the cytokines IL-10, IL-1 |
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| Ham et al. [ | 2014 | PBMC | Incubation of CD4+ with vit D 50 nM | Determination of CD25+ and CD39+ cells | 3-fold increase of CD25+ cells, CD39+ unchanged |
CD: Crohn's disease; UC: ulcerative colitis; HC: healthy controls; vit: vitamin; p.o.: per os; GI: gastrointestinal; KO: knock-out; TNBS: 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid; i.p.: intraperitoneal; DSS: dextran sodium sulfate; 25(OH)D: 25-hydroxycholecalciferol; 1,25(OH)2D3: 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol; vitamin D3 (vit D3): cholecalciferol; VDR: vitamin D receptor; MEF: mouse embryonic fibroblasts; AIEC: adherent-invasive Escherichia coli; TER: transepithelial electrical resistance; TJ: tight-junction; aVD: active vitamin D (1,25(OH)2D3); pVD: plain vitamin D (25(OH)vitamin D); CDAI: Crohn's disease activity index; CRP: C-reactive protein; SIBDQ: Short IBD questionnaire; PBMC: peripheral blood mononuclear cells; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; LPMCs: lamina propria mononuclear cells; IBDQ: IBD questionnaire; IL: interleukin; Cyp: Cyp27b1 gene; IFN: interferon; TNF: tumor necrosis factor; BUT butyrate; SEMF: subepithelial myofibroblasts; ECM: extracellular matrix; α-SMA: alpha smooth muscle actin; FISH: fluorescent in situ hybridization; HIEC: human intestinal epithelial cells; ATG16L1: autophagy related 16-like 1 (S. cerevisiae); LC3B: autophagy-related protein LC3B; SKCO15: human colorectal adenocarcinoma cells; HCT116: human colon cancer cell.