Abstract

Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD), a disorder that affects 11% of the world's population, is characterized by an acceleration in skeletal, immune, renal, and cardiovascular aging that increases the risk of cardiovascular mortality by 10- to 20-fold, compared to that in individuals with normal renal function. For more than two decades, the progressive impairment in renal capacity to maintain normal circulating levels of the hormonal form of vitamin D (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D or calcitriol) was considered the main contributor to the reduced survival of CKD patients. Accordingly, calcitriol administration was the treatment of choice to attenuate the progression of secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) and its adverse impact on bone health and vascular calcification. The development of calcitriol analogs, designed to mitigate the resistance to calcitriol suppression of PTH associated with CKD progression, demonstrated survival benefits unrelated to the control of SHPT or skeletal health. The exhaustive search for the pathophysiology behind survival benefits associated with active vitamin D analogs has identified novel anti-inflammatory, anti-hypertensive, anti-aging actions of the vitamin D endocrine system. A major paradigm shift regarding the use of calcitriol or active vitamin D analogs to improve survival in CKD patients emerged upon demonstration of a high prevalence of vitamin D (not calcitriol) deficiency at all stages of CKD and, more significantly, that maintaining serum levels of the calcitriol precursor, 25(OH)vitamin D, above 23 ng/ml delayed CKD progression. The cause of vitamin D deficiency in CKD, however, is unclear since vitamin D bioactivation to 25(OH)D occurs mostly at the liver. Importantly, neither calcitriol nor its analogs can correct vitamin D deficiency. The goals of this chapter are to present our current understanding of the pathogenesis of vitamin D deficiency in CKD and of the causal link between defective vitamin D bioactivation to calcitriol and the onset of molecular pathways that promote CKD progression independently of the degree of SHPT. An understanding of these mechanisms will highlight the need for identification of novel sensitive biomarkers to assess the efficacy of interventions with vitamin D and/or calcitriol(analogs) to ameliorate CKD progression in a PTH-independent manner.

Highlights

  • Frontiers in MedicineReceived: 06 October 2021 Accepted: 15 November 2021 Published: 07 December 2021. Citation: Dusso AS, Bauerle KT and Bernal-Mizrachi C (2021) Non-classical Vitamin D Actions for

  • The vitamin D endocrine system is critical for human health, and a structurally normal kidney is essential to maintain the functional integrity of the vitamin D endocrine system

  • In chronic kidney disease (CKD), a disorder that affects 11% of the world’s population, there are progressive reductions in renal capacity to produce the active form of vitamin D, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, and a surprising inability to maintain circulating vitamin D levels, resulting in an accelerated immune, skeletal, renal and cardiovascular aging

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Summary

Frontiers in Medicine

Received: 06 October 2021 Accepted: 15 November 2021 Published: 07 December 2021. Citation: Dusso AS, Bauerle KT and Bernal-Mizrachi C (2021) Non-classical Vitamin D Actions for. The goals of this chapter are to present our current understanding of the pathogenesis of vitamin D deficiency in CKD and of the causal link between defective vitamin D bioactivation to calcitriol and the onset of molecular pathways that promote CKD progression independently of the degree of SHPT. An understanding of these mechanisms will highlight the need for identification of novel sensitive biomarkers to assess the efficacy of interventions with vitamin D and/or calcitriol(analogs) to ameliorate CKD progression in a PTH-independent manner

INTRODUCTION
DEFECTIVE VITAMIN D BIOACTIVATION TO CALCITRIOL IN CKD
Induction of Klotho
Findings
Suppression of Renin
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