| Literature DB >> 35291276 |
Abstract
Since the discovery of vitamin D, it has been accepted that its physiological supply is either from food or by endogenous synthesis in skin exposed to solar UV light. Yet vitamin D is a component of very few foods and its supply as a natural nutrient is unable to maintain good vitamin D status for human populations. One aspect of vitamin D physiology that has been ignored is that the mechanisms for its transport and processing from these two sources are quite different. Excess intake of vitamin D causes hypercalcaemic toxicity. However, experiments with different animal species have shown that long-term supply of oral vitamin D in apparently non-toxic amounts causes atherosclerosis in large arteries. A mechanism for this toxicity is proposed. Alternative strategies for addressing widespread vitamin D deficiency by food fortification should be considered in light of the angiotoxicity caused by oral vitamin D in animal experiments.Entities:
Keywords: 25(OH)D, 25-hydroxy vitamin D; 25-hydroxyvitamin D production; 25-hydroxyvitamin D toxicity; 7-DHC, 7-dehydrocholesterol; Angiotoxicity; DBP, vitamin D-specific-binding protein; Vitamin D transport
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35291276 PMCID: PMC8889086 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2022.11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Vitamin D content of unfortified food
| Vitamin D3 | 25(OH)D3 | Vitamin D2 | 25(OH)D2 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reference No. | (6) | (7) | (6) | (7) | (6) | (7) | (6) | (7) |
| Milk | 0·4 | 0·08 | 0·12 | 0·04 | 0·12 | − | − | − |
| Egg (μg/egg) | 0·55 | 0·72 | 0·3 | 0·24 | − | − | − | − |
| Beef (μg/100 g) | 0·12 | 0·06 | 0·17 | 0·16 | 0·17 | 0·027 | 0·06 | 0·063 |
| Salmon (μg/100 g) | 8·7 | 8·7 | 0·18 | 0·18 | − | − | − | − |
Full-cream milk.
Potential yield of vitamin D3 formed in skin from a single exposure to UV sunlight
| 5 % skin | 10 % skin | 20 % skin | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7-DHC | 458 | 917 | 1834 |
| Vitamin D3 produced at 10 % conversion | 46 | 92 | 183 |
| Vitamin D3 produced at 20 % conversion | 92 | 183 | 367 |
The yield of vitamin D3 in skin, in response to exposure to UV light from the sun, depends not only on the number of minutes of a single period of exposure, but also on many other variables, including the seasonal intensity of solar UVB radiation, absorption of UVB radiation by skin pigmentation, the age of the irradiated individual and the proportion of pre-vitamin D3 produced that is then converted by prolonged irradiation, to other non-biologically active products. Experiments with human skin, irradiated in vitro, have found up to 35 % of total 7-DHC that can be converted to pre-vitamin D3 in a single exposure session(.
Based on the calculated total skin area of an adult male of 18 229 cm2(.
Lowest concentration of 7-DHC in skin, which ranges from 0·5–1·3 μg/cm2(.
Fig. 1.Pig aortic endothelial cells grown in culture: (a) control cells and (b) cells exposed for 24 h to 300 nm 25(OH)D3. Reproduced from Levene and Lawson(.
Fig. 2.Aortic lesions in squirrel monkeys given daily oral doses of vitamin D. Adult squirrel monkeys weighing 750–1000 g were given daily oral doses of 12·5 μg vitamin D3 for 10–18 months with diets containing 0·5 % cholesterol. Histological sections of the aorta of these animals showed (a) intimal thickening with proliferation of myointimal cells and (b) atheromatous plaques. No aortic lesions were reported in animals on control diets containing 0·5 % cholesterol and providing 2·5 μg vitamin D3 per day. Reproduced with permission from Peng et al. (.