| Literature DB >> 35739987 |
Massimiliano Berretta1, Vincenzo Quagliariello2, Alessia Bignucolo3, Sergio Facchini4, Nicola Maurea2, Raffaele Di Francia5,6, Francesco Fiorica7, Saman Sharifi8, Silvia Bressan8,9, Sara N Richter10, Valentina Camozzi11, Luca Rinaldi12, Carla Scaroni10, Monica Montopoli8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vitamin D exerts multiple beneficial effects in humans, including neuronal, immune, and bone homeostasis and the regulation of cardiovascular functions. Recent studies correlate vitamin D with cancer cell growth and survival, but meta-analyses on this topic are often not consistent.Entities:
Keywords: calcium homeostasis; cancer; immune system; infectious disease; vitamin D
Year: 2022 PMID: 35739987 PMCID: PMC9220017 DOI: 10.3390/antiox11061090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1Flow diagram of systematic review. * The databases were last accessed on 31 January 2022.
Figure 2There are several sources of vitamin D: enriched food, supplements, and fortified foods. D2 and D3 are mainly a double bond between C22 and C23 and a methyl group at C24 in the side chain (Figure 3), so Vit D2 can be considered as the first Vit D analogue [17]. The structural differences to Vit D3 in the side chain are responsible for decreasing the affinity of Vit D2 to its target, the Vit-D-binding protein (DBP);therefore, it can be removed from the bloodstream more quickly [18]. This may limit its conversion to 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) (Figure 2) by at least some of the 25-hydroxylases yet to be described and alter its degradation by 24-hydroxyase (CYP24A1) [18]. Therefore, to achieve high blood levels of 25OHD compared to Vit D3 levels, D2 supplementation must be administered daily [19,20]. Nevertheless, 1,25(OH)2D2 and 1,25(OH)2D3 have similar affinity with the Vit D receptor (VDR) [17]. Regardless of the source, Vit D undergoes two steps of hydroxylation, as shown in Figure 1. The first hydroxylation step is carried out by both microsomal and mitochondrial enzymes in the liver. This can lead to the formation of 25OHD, which circulates in large amounts [21]. Most 25OHD is bound to serum proteins and generally has a half-life of less than three weeks. The second hydroxylation step occurs in the proximal tubule cells of the kidneys via 1-a-hydroxylase, resulting in the production of 25OHD2, also known as calcitriol. In addition to proximal tubule cells, this enzyme is also produced in many other cell types, such as cardiomyocytes, endothelial cells, and macrophages, but renal 1-a-hydroxylation is considered the major player in the circulation of calcitriol under normal conditions [22]. The metabolism of Vit D is discussed in detail in the Metabolism section of this review.
Figure 3The structures of Vit D2 and Vit D3 and their precursors. The structural difference between Vit D2 and D3 is in the side chain. Compared with cholecalciferol, Vit D2 has a double bond between carbons 22 and 23 and a methyl group on carbon 24 of the broken ring.
CYPs that are mainly involved in Vit D metabolism.
| 25-Hydroxylase Activity | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| CYP Enzyme | Hydroxylate Function | Location/Expression | Note |
| CYP27A1 | Does not 25-hydroxylate Vitamin D2 | Liver, mitochondrial 25-hydroxylase, widely distributed throughout the body | Mouse mutation: increase in 25OHD blood level [ |
| CYP2R1 | 25-hydroxylates both vitamin D2 and D3 | Microsomal fraction of mouse liver [ | CYP27A1 null mouse: increase CYP2R1 expression, hence increased blood levels of 25OHD. CYP2R1 null mouse: 50% decrease in 25OHD blood level [ |
| CYP3A4 | Prefers 1αOHD to 25OHD as substrate | Liver and intestine | Is a major drug-metabolizing enzyme |
| CYP2J3 | More 25-hydroxylase activity than CYP2J2 | Rat liver | More 25-hydroxylase activity than its human homolog (CYP2J2) |
| CYP2J2 | Less 25-hydroxylase activity than CYP2J3 | Primarily in the heart | It is the human homolog of CYP2J3, functioning mainly as an arachidonic acid epooxygenase [ |
| CYP2D25 | Does not have substantial 25-hydroxylase activity [ | Its human homolog was initially isolated from pig livers and kidneys [ | - |
| CYP2C11 | 25-hydroxylase activity for vitamin D3 and D2 and 1OHD analogs | Expression in livers of male rats | Known for hydroxylation of testosterone [ |
| 1α-hydroxylase | |||
| CYP27B1 | The only enzyme with 25OHD 1α-hydroxylase ativity | Kidney (mainly), other tissues such as epithelial cells in the lungs, breast, skin, intestine, prostate; parathyroid gland), pancreatic islets, thyroid, testes, ovary, and placenta; macrophages, and T and B lymphocytes and dendritic cells (DCs); osteoblasts and chondrocytes [ | Gene mutation leads to pseudovitamin D deficiency caused by inadequate 1,25(OH)2D production [ PTH stimulates CYP27B1. FGF23 and 1,25(OH)2D inhibit CYP27B1 Elevated calcium arrests PTH, leading to CYP27B1 suppression. High phosphate stimulates FGF23 and leads to CYP27B1 termination [ |
| 24-hydroxylase | |||
| CYP24A1 | The only enzyme with 24-hydroxylase ativity | Kidneys (mainly) | With both 24-hydroxylase and 23-hydroxylase activity, CYP24A1 mutation leads to removal of all 24-hydroxylated metabolites of vitamin D; therefore, it can cause defective mineralization of intramembranous (not endochondral) bone [ |
| 3-epimerase (3-epi) | |||
| - | It produces the 3- | Keratinocyte, hepatocyte-derived cells, parathyroid cells, colon cancer cells, osteo-blasts, but not in the kidneys | The enzyme has not been purified and sequenced yet. It therefore remains unclear whether one gene product is involved. |
| 20-hydroxylation | |||
| CYP11A1 | 20-hydroxylation of vitamin D | Keratinocyte | The product, 20-hydroxylation, or its metabolite, 20,23(OH)2D, appear to have similar activity to 1,25(OH)2D, although not for all functions [ |
Major and moderate drug interactions with vitamin D [68].
| Drug/Susbance | Action | Clinical Action | Interaction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Erdafitinib | The mechanism appears to be related to the pharmacodynamic effects of fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR/aKlotho) inhibition by erdafitinib. | Minimizes risk of hyperphosphatemia; it is recommended to restrict phosphate intake to 600–800 mg daily | Major |
| Ergocalciferol and Vit D3 derivates | Additional effects result in toxicity, manifesting as hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria, and hyperphosphatemia. | In hypercalcemia, vitamin D and any calcium supplements should be immediately stopped | Major |
| Oxcarbazepin | It induces CYP450 inducers. It may decrease the pharmacologic effects of vitamin D analogs, inducing the hepatic conversion of vitamin D to inactive metabolites. | Patients who metabolize CYP450 poorly must be supplemented with double doses of Vit D when receiving oxicarbazepin. | Moderate |
| Magnesium salts and products | Possibly increases plasma hypermagnesemia, particularly in chronic renal dialysis patients, due to potentially additive pharmacologic effects. Chronic hypermagnesemia may have a role in the pathogenesis of adynamic bone disease in dialysis patients. | Patients on chronic renal dialysis treated with a vitamin D analog should avoid magnesium-containing products | Moderate |
| Indapamide and other thiazide | Thiazide diuretics inhibit the renal excretion of calcium and may also enhance the responsiveness of bone and renal tubule to parathyroid hormone.Thus, the concurrent use of large amounts of calcium or vitamin D can lead to excessively high plasma levels of calcium. | Serum calcium should be monitored if patients experience signs of hypercalcemia, such as dizziness, weakness, lethargy, headache, myalgia, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, and seizures | Moderate |
Characteristics of VDR PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) fragments.
| Restriction Sites | PCR Amplicon | Allelic Variants | Fragments Post-Digestion (bp) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 745 bp | A/A | 745 | |
| A/a | 745 + 528 + 218 | ||
| a/a | 528 + 218 | ||
|
| 745 bp | T/T | 745 |
| T/t | 745 + 293 + 251 + 201 | ||
| t/t | 293 + 251 + 201 | ||
|
| 822 bp | B/B | 822 |
| B/b | 822 + 646 + 176 | ||
| b/b | 646 + 176 | ||
|
| 267 bp | f/f | 267 |
| F/f | 267 + 197 + 70 | ||
| F/F | 197 + 70 |
Figure 4Summary of Vitamin D effects on human bone, thyroid, kidney, and calcium homeostasis.
Figure 5Immune modulation of Vitamin D in different immune cells.