Guest guest Posted January 8, 2001 Report Share Posted January 8, 2001 from: http://pharminfo.com/pubs/msb/light.html Cholecalciferol: the sunlight " vitamin " Medical Sciences Bulletin, Aug. 1995 Cholecalciferol is commonly known as vitamin D, but it is not really a vitamin at all. Technically, it is not even a nutrient. It is a sterol formed naturally in the skin by the photochemical conversion of a precursor -- 7-dehydrocholesterol -- via sunlight, in particular the shortest wavelengths of solar ultraviolet light. When it was first discovered, it was mistakenly grouped with the fat-soluble vitamins (A, E, and K) because it was found in small quantities in butter and because deficiency leads to the bone diseases rickets and osteomalacia. In a comprehensive report about vitamin D, Fraser described the synthesis and activity of this interesting substance. Cholecalciferol is referred to as vitamin D3, which distinguishes it from vitamin D2, or ergocalciferol, a very rare form of the vitamin that is produced by ultraviolet irradiation of the fungal steroid ergosterol. (Vitamin D1 was found to be a mixture of ergocalciferol and other sterols, and so the term was abandoned.) Cholecalciferol itself is not biologically active. It must be hydroxylated twice for activation, the first time in the liver and the second in the kidney (in the proximal convoluted tubule). The final product -- 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol or 1,25(OH)2D -- is secreted into the blood for delivery to target cells, where it acts the same way as steroid hormones do: it binds to a receptor protein in the cell's nucleus, which then binds to regulatory sequences on DNA. This complex induces the transcription of RNA, which codes for proteins involved in cell function. The primary function of vitamin D is whole-body calcium homeostasis. Along with parathyroid hormone and calcitonin, vitamin D provides the control mechanism for preventing hypocalcemia or hypercalcemia. One of the most important proteins induced by vitamin D is a calcium-binding protein in the duodenal mucosa. This protein increases calcium absorption in response to low calcium supply or increased physiologic requirements (such as growth or lactation). Vitamin D is also involved in the handling of calcium by the kidney. Thus, vitamin D is technically a steroid hormone synthesized in the kidney in response to calcium needs. There is a specific 1,25(OH)2D receptor protein found in most nucleated cells in the body. This implies that vitamin D has more functions than just calcium homeostasis (which would only require receptors in gut, bone, and kidney tissues). Vitamin D may be involved in immune function and skeletal muscle activity and may suppress cell proliferation. Deficiency of vitamin D is usually the result of limited exposure to ultraviolet sunlight and is more common in the elderly than in younger persons (with the exception of heavily veiled women). Deficiency is also caused by calcium deficiency, which appears to increase the production of 1,25(OH)2D and deplete reserves. Rickets is generally related to calcium deficiency, not vitamin D deficiency. Indeed, according to Fraser, the decline in incidence of vitamin D deficiency seen in developed countries is probably due to improved dietary calcium intake and increased exposure to sunlight, rather than to vitamin D supplementation. The decline is often, and probably erroneously, attributed to the vitamin D enrichment of milk. Vitamin D deficiency is widely believed to cause osteoporosis, but in general, osteoporosis in the elderly does not correlate with vitamin D status. Vitamin D deficiency is associated with a different bone disease: osteomalacia. This disease may manifest as muscle weakness, which can lead to falls and fractures, or it may manifest as secondary hyperparathyroidism. Osteomalacia can be treated with a very small daily dose of vitamin D (10 mcg orally). In developed countries, vitamin D toxicity may be more of a problem than vitamin D deficiency. Prolonged exposure of the skin to sunlight can induce sunburn, said Fraser, but it cannot produce an excess of vitamin D. What can produce an excess of vitamin D is the self-medication of synthetic vitamin D in mg doses for weeks or months for conditions such as arthritis, psoriasis, and carpal tunnel syndrome. Overdosing leads to hypercalcemia and deposition of calcium in arteries, joints, and kidneys. Symptoms of hypercalcemia include anorexia, nausea, vomiting, polyuria, polydipsia (suggestive of diabetes mellitus), and ultimately coma. Rickets due to vitamin D deficiency from low calcium intake and lack of sunlight was a disease of the 19th century and earlier. Vitamin D toxicity is a disease of the 20th century. (Fraser DR. Lancet. 1995; 345: 104-107.) PharmInfoNet © 1996 VirSci Corporation. All rights reserved. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.