scholarly journals Vitamin D signaling maintains intestinal innate immunity and gut microbiota: potential intervention for metabolic syndrome and NAFLD

2020 ◽  
Vol 318 (3) ◽  
pp. G542-G553 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yilan Zeng ◽  
Mei Luo ◽  
Liwei Pan ◽  
Yuan Chen ◽  
Siqi Guo ◽  
...  

A lack of sunlight exposure, residence in the northern latitudes, and dietary vitamin D insufficiency are coprevalent with metabolic syndrome (MetS), Type 2 diabetes (T2D), and nonalcoholic fatty liver diseases (NAFLD), implying a potential causality and underlying mechanism. Whether vitamin D supplementation or treatment can improve these disorders is controversial, in part, because of the absence of large-scale trials. Experimental investigations, on the other hand, have uncovered novel biological functions of vitamin D in development, tumor suppression, and immune regulation, far beyond its original role as a vitamin that maintained calcium homeostasis. While the large intestine harbors massive numbers of microbes, the small intestine has a minimal quantity of bacteria, indicating the existence of a gating system located in the distal region of the small intestine that may restrain bacterial translocation to the small intestine. Vitamin D receptor (VDR) was found to be highly expressed at the distal region of small intestine, where the vitamin D signaling promotes innate immunity, including the expression of α-defensins by Paneth cells, and maintains the intestinal tight junctions. Thus, a new hypothesis is emerging, indicating that vitamin D deficiency may impair the intestinal innate immunity, including downregulation of Paneth cell defensins, leading to bacterial translocation, endotoxemia, systemic inflammation, insulin resistance, and hepatic steatosis. Here, we review the studies for vitamin D for innate immunity and metabolic homeostasis, and we outline the clinical trials of vitamin D for mitigating MetS, T2D, and NAFLD.

2020 ◽  
Vol 319 (6) ◽  
pp. G685-G695
Author(s):  
Pengfei Wu ◽  
Ruofei Zhang ◽  
Mei Luo ◽  
Tianci Zhang ◽  
Lisha Pan ◽  
...  

Vitamin D deficiency is coprevalent with various liver diseases, indicating the role of vitamin D in maintaining liver homeostasis. In this study, we observed that the hepatic 25-hydroxylation of VD is critical for intestinal innate immunity through VD signaling in the small intestine for maintaining Paneth cell functions. Conversely, failure of biogenesis of VD in the liver impairs intestinal immunity, leading to gut dysbiosis and endotoxemia, which promotes liver fibrogenesis.


1960 ◽  
Vol 198 (2) ◽  
pp. 275-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Schachter ◽  
Eugene B. Dowdle ◽  
Harris Schenker

Respiring slices of the proximal small intestine of the rat accumulate Ca45 in vitro, and after 1 hour of incubation at 37°C the Ca45 concentration ratio tissue/medium is approximately 5. When oxidative metabolism is prevented by incubation under N2, or when the generation of phosphate-bond energy is inhibited with 2,4-dinitrophenol, the corresponding Ca45 ratio tissue/medium is approximately 2. The oxygen-dependent accumulation of Ca45 is limited in capacity, relatively specific for Ca++ in contrast to Sr++ or Ba++, inhibited by K+, and dependent on the dietary vitamin D. It is greater with slices from young, growing rats than with those from older rats. The results indicate that the accumulation of Ca45 by slices results mainly from the active transfer of calcium previously observed with everted gut-sacs.


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