Abstract

Vitamin D is best known for its role in maintaining bone health and calcium homeostasis. However, it also exerts a broad range of extra-skeletal effects on cellular physiology and on the immune system. Vitamins D2 and D3 share a high degree of structural similarity. Functional equivalence in their vitamin D-dependent effects on human physiology is usually assumed but has in fact not been well defined experimentally. In this study we seek to redress the gap in knowledge by undertaking an in-depth examination of changes in the human blood transcriptome following supplementation with physiological doses of vitamin D2 and D3. Our work extends a previously published randomized placebo-controlled trial that recruited healthy white European and South Asian women who were given 15 µg of vitamin D2 or D3 daily over 12 weeks in wintertime in the UK (Nov-Mar) by additionally determining changes in the blood transcriptome over the intervention period using microarrays. An integrated comparison of the results defines both the effect of vitamin D3 or D2 on gene expression, and any influence of ethnic background. An important aspect of this analysis was the focus on the changes in expression from baseline to the 12-week endpoint of treatment within each individual, harnessing the longitudinal design of the study. Whilst overlap in the repertoire of differentially expressed genes was present in the D2 or D3-dependent effects identified, most changes were specific to either one vitamin or the other. The data also pointed to the possibility of ethnic differences in the responses. Notably, following vitamin D3 supplementation, the majority of changes in gene expression reflected a down-regulation in the activity of genes, many encoding pathways of the innate and adaptive immune systems, potentially shifting the immune system to a more tolerogenic status. Surprisingly, gene expression associated with type I and type II interferon activity, critical to the innate response to bacterial and viral infections, differed following supplementation with either vitamin D2 or vitamin D3, with only vitamin D3 having a stimulatory effect. This study suggests that further investigation of the respective physiological roles of vitamin D2 and vitamin D3 is warranted.

Highlights

  • Vitamin D is a pro-hormone that is essential for human health

  • The study volunteers were South Asian (SA) and white European (WE) women based in the United Kingdom, aged between 20 and 64 years [n=335; [28]] and participation was for 12 weeks over the winter months (October to March, in Surrey, UK; latitude, 51°14’ N)

  • Serum measurements, including concentrations of total 25(OH)D, 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3, were determined from fasting blood samples taken at the start [baseline defined as Visit 1 (V1)] and at weeks 6 (V2) and 12 (V3)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Vitamin D is a pro-hormone that is essential for human health. While vitamin D is best known for its role in maintaining bone health and calcium homeostasis, it exerts a broad range of extra-skeletal effects on cellular physiology and on the immune system [1,2,3,4,5,6] and multiple studies have linked poor vitamin D status with increased risk of osteoporotic and stress fractures, increased risk of developing cardiovascular diseases and some cancers, poor modulation of the immune system, higher mortality including death from cancer, and the pathogenesis of immune mediated inflammatory diseases [7,8,9,10]. Following two successive hydroxylation steps, in the liver and kidney, respectively, the active form of the vitamin, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25(OH) D3) binds to the intracellular vitamin D receptor (VDR) and, in complex with the retinoid X receptor (RXR), the heterodimer regulates expression of hundreds of genes through the vitamin D response element (VDRE) [15]; other tissues express the 25 (OH)D 1-a-hydroxylase kidney is considered the most important for production of circulating 1,25(OH)D [16]. Vitamin D2 binds DBP with lower affinity and is catabolised faster [20, 21]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call