| Literature DB >> 35662320 |
Amy A Irving1, Bayley J Waters1, Jeremy R Seeman2, Lori A Plum1, Hector F DeLuca1.
Abstract
Epidemiological observations have prompted some to posit that elevated circulating vitamin D is responsible for reduced colon cancer in individuals residing near the equator. We have previously demonstrated that vitamin D has no effect on colon cancer in two rodent models of intestinal tumorigenesis. We have now extended this line of inquiry to ask whether ablation of vitamin D receptor (VDR) affects tumorigenesis. A VDR null rat was developed using Cas9-CRISPR technology, which allowed us to investigate whether 1,25(OH)D3 signaling through its receptor plays a role in intestinal tumorigenesis. Loss of VDR expression alone did not induce tumorigenesis, even in animals exposed to the inflammatory agent dextran sodium sulfate. These VDR-/- rats were then crossed with ApcPirc/+ rats, which are predisposed to the development of intestinal neoplasms. In combination with the Pirc/+ mutation, VDR loss did not enhance tumor multiplicity, growth, or progression in the colon or small intestine. This study demonstrates that the vitamin D receptor does not impact tumor development, and strongly supports previous findings that vitamin D itself does not play a role in colon cancer development or progression. Alternative explanations are needed for the original latitude hypothesis, as well as observational data in humans. This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper.Entities:
Keywords: Calcium; Colon cancer; Rat model; Vitamin D receptor
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35662320 PMCID: PMC9277077 DOI: 10.1242/bio.059290
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Open ISSN: 2046-6390 Impact factor: 2.643
Fig. 1.Phenotyping of the VDR null rat. (A) No VDR protein was detected by western blot in the colon of VDR rats. (B) On an ND, VDR rats show a significant reduction in serum calcium within 2 weeks, which is further reduced by 4 weeks on diet (P<0.0001). Feeding knockout rats RD maintains their serum calcium at normal levels comparable to wild-type animals on either diet. (C) As expected, serum PTH was significantly elevated in VDR rats maintained on ND (P<0.001); this increase was generally abrogated when VDR−/− rats were placed on RD. Black bars, VDR on RD (n=6); gray bars, VDR on ND (n=6); white bars, VDR on RD (n=7); hatched bars, VDR on ND (n=7). Serum biochemical assay results were analyzed using a two-sided Wilcoxon rank sum test. * P≤0.05, ns denotes no statistically significant difference. Data shown as mean±s.d.
Fig. 2.Tumor multiplicity and size data. VDR rats with wild-type Apc did not develop tumors in either the small intestine or colon. (A) In the small intestine, no difference in tumor multiplicity was seen for either female or male rats lacking VDR, compared to their wild-type counterparts (Apc=36, Apc=36, P=0.09). (B) Similarly in the colon, no difference in tumor multiplicity was detected between animals with or without intact VDR expression (Apc=36, Apc=36, P=0.2). (C) No increase in tumor size with loss of VDR expression was detected in female rats (P=0.7), while male rats showed a significant reduction in tumor size (Apc=67, Apc=55, P=0.02). (D) When Apc rats were treated with the inflammatory agent DSS (gray circles), colonic tumor multiplicity was significantly increased compared to untreated controls, regardless of VDR genotype (black circles, 12 rats/genotype/group, P<0.0001). In the Apc rat, the means of tumor multiplicity data are not normally distributed and require the use of nonparametric statistics; thus, a two-sided Wilcoxon rank sum test was used. Tumor multiplicities in the Apc rat show significant sex and age differences; therefore, data were blocked based on Lehman's extension to the Wilcoxon rank sum test and jointly tested for the effects of the test conditions. Data shown as mean±s.d.
Fig. 3.Biochemical assay data (A) Serum calcium did not differ between Apc and Apc females (P=0.09); serum calcium was significantly increased in Apc males (P=0.5, six rats/sex/genotype). (B) No correlation between serum calcium level and colon tumor count was detected (P=0.7). (C) Regardless of sex, rats lacking functional VDR showed significantly lower circulating 25(OH)D3 level than rats with intact VDR (P=0.0001, six rats/genotype). (D) No correlation between circulating 25(OH)D3 level and colon tumor count was detected (P=1). Serum biochemical assay results were analyzed using a two-sided Wilcoxon rank sum test. * P≤0.05. Data shown as mean±s.d.