Gibson Christopher C, Davis Chadwick T, Zhu Weiquan, Bowman-Kirigin Jay A, Walker Ashley E, Tai Zhengfu, Thomas Kirk R, Donato Anthony J, Lesniewski Lisa A, Li Dean Y
Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84112, United States of America; Department of Bioengineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84112, United States of America; Recursion Pharmaceuticals, LLC, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84108, United States of America.
Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84112, United States of America; Recursion Pharmaceuticals, LLC, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84108, United States of America; Department of Human Genetics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84112, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Oct 15;10(10):e0140370. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0140370. eCollection 2015.
Vitamin D is a known modulator of inflammation. Native dietary vitamin D3 is thought to be bio-inactive, and beneficial vitamin D3 effects are thought to be largely mediated by the metabolite 1,25(OH)2D3. Reduced serum levels of the most commonly measured precursor metabolite, 25(OH)D3, is linked to an increased risk of multiple inflammatory diseases, including: cardiovascular disease, arthritis, multiple sclerosis, and sepsis. Common to all of these diseases is the disruption of endothelial stability and an enhancement of vascular leak. We previously performed an unbiased chemical suppressor screen on a genetic model of vascular instability, and identified cholecalciferol (D3, dietary Vitamin D3) as a factor that had profound and immediate stabilizing and therapeutic effects in that model. In this manuscript we show that the presumed inactive sterol, D3, is actually a potent and general mediator of endothelial stability at physiologically relevant concentrations. We further demonstrate that this phenomenon is apparent in vitamin D3 metabolites 25(OH)D3 and 1,25(OH)2D3, and that the effects are independent of the canonical transcription-mediated vitamin D pathway. Our data suggests the presence of an alternative signaling modality by which D3 acts directly on endothelial cells to prevent vascular leak. The finding that D3 and its metabolites modulate endothelial stability may help explain the clinical correlations between low serum vitamin D levels and the many human diseases with well-described vascular dysfunction phenotypes.
维生素D是一种已知的炎症调节剂。天然膳食维生素D3被认为是无生物活性的,而有益的维生素D3效应在很大程度上被认为是由代谢物1,25(OH)2D3介导的。最常检测的前体代谢物25(OH)D3的血清水平降低与多种炎症性疾病的风险增加有关,包括:心血管疾病、关节炎、多发性硬化症和败血症。所有这些疾病的共同特征是内皮稳定性破坏和血管渗漏增强。我们之前在血管不稳定的遗传模型上进行了无偏倚的化学抑制剂筛选,并确定胆钙化醇(D3,膳食维生素D3)是在该模型中具有深远且即时稳定和治疗作用的一个因素。在本手稿中,我们表明假定无活性的固醇D3在生理相关浓度下实际上是内皮稳定性的一种强效且通用的介质。我们进一步证明这种现象在维生素D3代谢物25(OH)D3和1,25(OH)2D3中也很明显,并且这些效应独立于经典转录介导的维生素D途径。我们的数据表明存在一种替代信号传导方式,通过该方式D3直接作用于内皮细胞以防止血管渗漏。D3及其代谢物调节内皮稳定性这一发现可能有助于解释低血清维生素D水平与许多具有明确血管功能障碍表型的人类疾病之间的临床相关性。