| Literature DB >> 32422882 |
Patricia Mae Garcia1, Jeff Moore1, David Kahan1, Mee Young Hong1.
Abstract
Vitamin D is widely known to regulate bone health, but there is increasing evidence that it may also ameliorate colitis through inflammation, cell proliferation and apoptosis, and the microbiota. The purpose of this review is to systematically examine the mechanisms by which vitamin D reduces colitis. PubMed and Web of Science were searched for articles published between 2008 and 2019 using key words such as "vitamin D," "colitis," "inflammatory bowel disease," "inflammation," "apoptosis," "cell proliferation," and "gut bacteria". Retrieved articles were further narrowed and it was determined whether their title and abstracts contained terminology pertaining to vitamin D in relation to colitis in human clinical trials, animal studies, and cell culture/biopsy studies, as well as selecting the best match sorting option in relation to the research question. In total, 30 studies met the established criteria. Studies consistently reported results showing that vitamin D supplementation can downregulate inflammatory pathways of COX-2, TNF-α, NF-κB, and MAPK, modify cell kinetics, and alter gut microbiome, all of which contribute to an improved state of colitis. Although vitamin D and vitamin D analogs have demonstrated positive effects against colitis, more randomized, controlled human clinical trials are needed to determine the value of vitamin D as a therapeutic agent in the treatment of colitis.Entities:
Keywords: cell kinetics; gut microbiome; inflammation; inflammatory bowel disease; vitamin D
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32422882 PMCID: PMC7288056 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25102300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Characteristics of Published Clinical Trials Examining Vitamin D and Inflammation.
| Author (Year) | Study Type, Population | Measurements | Results | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brozek et al. (2012) [ | Factor and cluster analysis of 105 patients undergoing primary curative surgery for adenocarcinomas | Expression of | Compared to adjacent mucosa mRNA expression in cancerous lesions was ↑ in CYP27B1 (4-fold in low/high grade cancers), | Antagonism between |
| Frăţilă & Iliaş (2013) [ | Retrospective study | Colonoscopy biopsies: 20 high-grade dysplasia (HGD), 20 low grade dysplasia (LGD), 20 regenerative atypia, 20 indefinite for dysplasia; | COX-2 is positive in 72.5% LUC biopsies; LGD and HGD had Ki-67 staining | IHC staining may be used to manage increased colorectal cancer risk in LUC patients |
| Leedham et al. (2009) [ | Mutation burden analysis of individual crypts across colitis associated neoplasms | PCR and sequencing analysis to establish individual crypt adenomatous polyposis coli (APC), p53, K-RAS, and 17p loss of heterozygosity mutation burden | Monoclonality observed in most lesions typically from | |
| Wang et al. (2014) [ | Macrophages from COX-2 KO and COXNeo/Neo mice | COX-2 expression and PG expression in the presence and absence of LPS stimulation | 1,25-OHD results in dose-dependent inhibition of COX-2 expression and phosphorylation of Akt and IκBα in murine macrophages with and without LPS stimulation | Vitamin D influences inflammation and supplementation could improve chronic inflammatory diseases via targeting THEM4/Akt/NF-κB signaling |
| Hummel et al. (2014) [ | Adenocarcinoma cell line COGA-1A culture and treatment | COGA-1A cells treated with 10 nM 1,25-OHD, 100 ng/mL IL-6, 50 ng/mL or combination of for 6, 12, and 24 hrs; total RNA isolation; reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) | COGA-1A cells + 1,25-OHD = ↑ VDR expression; IL-6 ↑ CYP24A1 expression 3x; COX-2 and 15-PGH expression “unresponsive” with 1,25-OHD in COGA-1A cells, but TNF-α “highly ↑ COX-2 expression” | TNF-α and IL-6 inhibited vit D expression-activating gene CYP27B1 in COGA-1A cells |
| Fichera et al. (2007) [ | Male A/J mice (25 g) | Vitamin D analog Ro26-2198 (0.01 µg/kg body wt/day x 28 days); severity of colitis assessed via the Disease Activity Index; hematoxylin and eosin colonic sections examined for dysplasia; colonic lysates assessed for c-Myc, COX-2, phosphor-(active) extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK) via Western blotting | DSS treatment ↑ c-Myc 15-fold, ERK 10-fold, COX-2 2.5-fold | Vitamin D analog can be considered when treating colitis |
| Liu et al. (2016) [ | 25-OHD 1α-hydroxylase knockout (Cyp27b1−/−) mice fed high calcium, phosphate, and lactose rescue diet | Body weight, colon length, and colonic histologic structure | Cyp27b1-/- had ↓ bodyweight, colon length, colon length to bodyweight ratio, mucosa thickness and ↑ crypt damage | 1,25-OHD may influence colon inflammation and cancer development and progression |
| Laverny et al. (2010) [ | Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) obtained from IBD patients (21 ulcerative colitis patients, 22 Crohn’s Disease patients) | VDR agonist BXL-62 administration; histology; cytokine quantification; RT-PCR | BXL-62 has 3x less calcemic activity, ↓ proinflammatory cytokines in cells of IBD patients, ↑ CYP24A1 expression, ameliorates experimental colitis compared to 1,25-OHD | BXL-62 is a VDR agonist that does not promote hypercalcemia, ↓ in vitro pro-inflammatory cytokines, and may be used as IBD treatment |
| Li et al. (2015) [ | Gene therapy (regulate CYP27B1 expression via CD11b+/Gr1+ monocytes) in murine DSS-induced IBD model | Survival rate, weight, colonic structure, mucosal regeneration index, cytokine expression | ↑ survival, body weight gain, colon length, mucosal regeneration and ↓ proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-12, IL-23, Th1 and Th17) | This preliminary evidence of a monocyte-based adoptive CYP27B1 gene therapy in a murine IBD model may lead to novel therapy for autoimmune disease like IBD |
| Chen et al. (2017) [ | Genotyping of patients with colonic polyps (n = 144), colon cancer (n = 96), and UC (n = 44) to determine correlations between CYP24A1 SNPs and diseases | Genotyping of four SNPs (rs4809957, rs6068816, rs6091822 and rs8124792) and their association with colonic polyps, colon cancer, and UC | rs4809957, rs6068816, rs6091822 and rs8124792 are related to risk of colonic polyps and cancer; the A allele in rs8124792 may indicate colonic polyps and cancer not UC | |
| Stio et al. (2006) [ | PBMC of IBD patients; KH 1060 (vitamin D analog) treatment | [3H]thymidine incorporation; ELISA kit; VDR levels w/ Western blotting | KH 1060 ↓ PBMC proliferation, ↓ TNF-α, ↑ VDR expression | KH 1060 can be used on IBD patients to ↓ TNF-α |
| Zhao et al. (2012) [ | C57BL/6 mice (n = 30), equally divided among 3 groups: 2% DSS treatment, control, and vitamin D | Serum vitamin D levels, Rachmilewitz DAI (disease activity), colonic injury/inflammation; myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity, mesenteric lymph nodes cells (MLNs) and LPMC isolation; immunohistochemistry; immunofluorescence; | Serum vitamin D levels were ↓ in DSS group compared to control; DSS damaged mucosal barrier and ↑ colonic inflammation, ↑ weight loss; vitamin D inhibited colonic inflammation, maintained intestinal permeability, preserved colonic structural integrity, prevented DSS-induced tight junction disruption | Vitamin D warrants therapeutic potential against IBD |
| Strauch et al. (2007) [ | Female Balb/c mice w/ 3% DSS treatment; ZK191784 (vitamin D analog) 100 μg/kg per day | Histological examination; ELISA of MLNs; RT-PCR; immunohistochemistry | ZK191784 treatment ameliorates acute and chronic DSS-induced colitis, suppresses proinflammatory cytokine secretion by MLNs and primary dendritic cells | Another study by which vitamin D analog is shown to be beneficial against experimental colitis |
| Verlinden et al. (2013) [ | DSS-induced colitis in mice; TX527 (vitamin D analog) | Histological examination, transcript levels of proinflammatory cytokines | TX527 ameliorated DSS-colitis symptoms by ↓ diarrhea and bleeding, ↓ mucosal damage, crypt loss, immune cell infiltration, and ↓ proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1, IL-6, IFN-γ and TNF-α) | TX527 suggests therapeutic potential for IBD management |
| D’Ambrosio et al. (1998) [ | Cotransfected monocytic RAW264.7 cells with p40 promotor/reporter constructs and expression vectors of VDR and RXR-α | Expression of NF-κB pathway and cytokines following 1,25-OHD | 1,25-OH D caused downregulation of NF-κB activation and ↓ in downstream IL-12 | 1,25-OHD may downregulate IL-12 production via downregulation of NF-kB activation and p40-kB sequence binding |
| Du et al. (2015) [ | Cell study (HCT116, Caco-2, SW480) w/ TNF-α ± 1,25-OHD treatment; | Histology/immunostaining; Western blotting, RT-PCR, chromatin immunoprecipitation assay, myeloid perioxidase assay | TNF-α ↓ cells’ transepithelial electrical resistance (TER); > 70% VDR ↓ unable to counteract TNF-α activity and maintain TER; 1,25-OHD counteracts NF-κB by suppressing the myosin light chain kinase signaling pathway (MLCK); MLCK pathway activation = ↓ VDR in human biopsies; paricalcitol inhibits MLCK activation, regulates mucosal barrier, and ameliorates colitis in the mouse model | VDR is required to maintain and protect intestinal epithelial barrier |
| Meeker et al. (2014) [ | ↑ vitamin D diet after | Vitamin D intake suggests reduced colitis symptoms and delay progression to early stage carcinogenesis | ||
| Knackstedt et al. (2013) [ | Female C57BL/6J mice fed normal chow or vitamin D-deficient diet; | Vitamin D quantification; colitis scoring; immunohistochemistry; protein extraction; immunoblotting; RT-PCR | AOM/DSS-induced acute colitis mice had ↓ body weight, ↑ blood loss, shortened colon, ↓ serum vitamin D compared to control; CAC model had mortality rate between 10–40%, shortened colon, ↓ serum vitamin D, TNF-α upregulated, RXRα and VDR downregulated | Vitamin D-deficient diet leads to increased colitis scores in the mouse model, downregulated RXRα, VDR, and decreased serum vitamin D levels |
Characteristics of Published Clinical Trials Examining Vitamin D and Cell Kinetics.
| Author (Year) | Study Type, Population | Measurements | Results | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kong et al. (2008) [ | VDR+/+ (wild-type) and VDR−/− (KO) mice | Colonic samples; histology, immunostaining, electron microscopy, Western blotting, RT-PCR | VDR KO mice had more severe colitis/ulceration, symptoms like diarrhea, gross bleeding, rectal prolapse, ↑ mucosal permeability, impaired epithelial junction compared to wild-type mice; vitamin D treatment ↑ tight junction proteins in 24 h | Vitamin D may protect intestinal epithelial barrier by increasing tight junction proteins |
| Xin et al. (2017) [ | C57BL/6 mice | Serum vitamin D, calcium, creatinine levels; vitamin D (15, 30, or 60 IU⋅g−1⋅w−1); transient transfection, luciferase assay; RNA isolation, RT-PCR, immunoprecipitation and Western blotting | AOM/DSS treatment ↓ serum vitamin D levels; vitamin D administration significantly ↓ the number and colorectal neoplasms in a dose-dependent manner by up to 59%, ameliorated colon length shortening, ↓ cell proliferation in the colon | Vitamin D is beneficial against AOM-DSS-induced colitis-associated carcinogenesis |
| Fedirko et al. (2009) [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, clinical trial in men and women (N = 92) with confirmed colorectal adenoma | Automated immunohistochemistry and image analysis to detect and quantify expression and distribution of p21waf1/cip1, MIB-1, and hTERT in colorectal crypts | p21 expression ↑ 2-fold in Vitamin D and Vitamin D plus calcium but not in placebo group; no change in MIB-1 or hTERT expression; proportion of hTERT extending into upper 40% of the crypts ↓ by 15% | Calcium and Vitamin D promote differentiation of colorectal epithelial cells and may regulate colorectal crypt proliferative zone in patients with sporadic adenoma |
| Zhu et al. (2015) [ | Biopsies from IBD patients; | Western blotting, hematoxylin/eosin staining, serum vitamin D levels, FTC-dextran intestinal permeability | ↓ serum vitamin D and VDR among IBD patients; paricalcitol ↓ TNBS-induced colitis (i.e., minor weight loss, mild colitis, minimal histological damage), protects intestinal permeability, inhibits intestinal epithelial cell apoptosis by ↓ PUMA expression | Vitamin D and vitamin D analogs show promise when treating IBD by downregulating PUMA expression |
Characteristics of Published Clinical Trials Examining Vitamin D and the Microbiota.
| Author (Year) | Study Type, Population | Measurements | Results | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sharifi et al. (2016) [ | Double-blind, randomized, controlled trial with parallel design including UC patients in remission (N = 90) | Serum levels of 25-OHD, PTH, Calcium, ESR, and hs-CRP and cathelicidin expression via qRT-PCR pre and post 90 days of 300,000 IU intramuscular Vitamin D or saline placebo | From pre to post, ↑ 25 -OH D, ↑ hCAP18 (human cationic antimicrobial protein 18) gene expression, ↓ Hs-CRP and ↓ ESR only in Vitamin D group | Supplementation of Vitamin D may benefit UC patients as evidenced by ↓ ESR, ↓ hs-CRP, and ↑ LL37 gene expression |
| Wu et al. (2015) [ | C57BL/6 mice and VDR KO C57BL/6 mice; | VDR KO mice significantly lost more body weight, probiotics had no protection from | Probiotics are suggested to enhance VDR expression and may help protect against colitis | |
| Ananthakrishnan et al. (2014) [ | Multi-institutional cohort of IBD patients (n = 3188); 35 patients developed | Serum vitamin D level measurement via radioimmunoassay, high-performance liquid chromatography w/ mass spectrometry | IBD patients with CDI who died had a mean serum average of 12.8 + 8.1 ng/mL compared to IBD patients who remained alive at the end of follow up (24.3 + 13.2 ng/mL); 1 ng/mL increase in serum vitamin D = w/ a 4% CDI reduction | Higher serum vitamin D levels were associated with a decreased CDI risk |
| Wu et al. (2015) [ | Conditional VDR KO mouse model (VDRΔIEC) | Vitamin D-responsive element transcriptional activity, Western blotting, intestine histology, immunofluorescence, lysotracker staining, RT-PCR, chromatin immunoprecipitation (CHIP) assay | VDRΔIEC susceptible to DSS-induced colitis, ↓ weight, ↓ cecum length, fecal blood present, ↑ intestinal inflammation, fewer butyrate-producing bacteria and butyrate compared to no DSS treatment; butyrate ↑ VDR expression and inhibited inflammation; ↑ | VDR may help regulate intestinal homeostasis via production of antimicrobial peptides |
| Lagishetty et al. (2010) [ | C57BL/6 mice raised on a normal diet (n = 16) or vitamin D-deficient diet (n = 16) × 6 weeks | Tissue collection/analysis, clinical colitis score, histological colitis score, flow cytometry, RT-PCR; Ang4 immunohistochemical analysis | Vitamin D-deficient mice treated with DSS had more severe colitis, ↓ colonic Ang4 expression, ↑ bacterial infiltration compared to mice with normal diet; DSS-treated vitamin D-deficient mice had ↓ serum vitamin D level (2.5 ± 0.1 ng/mL) compared to mice with normal diet (24.4 ± 1.8 ng/mL) | Ang4 promotes bacterial innate immunity against gut microbes and its function under a low serum vitamin D levels is impeded |
| Ooi et al. (2013) [ | Cyp wild-type mice, Cyp KO mice, VDR wild-type mice, VDR KO mice | Fecal samples from mice | Vitamin D and VDR may influence microbiome composition and protect against GI insults | |
| Garg et al. (2018) [ | Patients with active UC, inactive UC and noninflammatory bowel disease controls; received 40,000 units cholecalciferol weekly for 8 weeks. | Markers of inflammation and fecal microbiota | Patients with active UC ↓ faecal calprotectin levels; this did not change in patients with inactive UC or non-IBD controls. No changes in overall fecal bacterial diversity. were noted although a significant ↑ in Enterobacteriaceae abundance in patients with UC | Vitamin D supplementation reduced intestinal inflammation in patients with active UC, with an increase in Enterobacteriaceae and a trend to reduction in the mucolytic species |
| Schaffler et al. (2018) [ | A prospective, longitudinal, controlled interventional analysis in seven patients with Crohn’s disease (CD) in clinical remission and 10 healthy controls (HC); orally administration of vitamin D | Intestinal bacterial composition | ↓ bacterial richness in the CD microbiome. | Vitamin D has a specific influence on the bacterial communities in CD, but not in HC. Administration of vitamin D may have a positive effect in CD by modulating the intestinal bacterial composition and also by increasing the abundance of potential beneficial bacterial strains. Vitamin D did not change the bacterial communities in HC. |