Advances in vitamin D metabolism and calcium homoestasis in domestic species.

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dc.contributor Fraser, DR
dc.date.accessioned 2012-02-01T02:43:33Z
dc.date.available 2012-02-01T02:43:33Z
dc.date.issued 1989
dc.identifier.uri http://livestocklibrary.com.au/handle/1234/19566
dc.description.abstract ADVANCES IN VITAMIN D METABOLISM AND CALCIUM HOMOEOSTASIS IN DOMESTIC SPECIES D.R. FRASER SUMMARY Vitamin D metabolism and function is quantitatively and qualitatively very similar in most mammalian species. Chickens, however, have a higher rate of turnover of vitamin D and are thus more susceptible to vitamin D deficiency if vitamin D supply is inadequate. Intensively reared animals such as pigs and poultry require dietary vitamin D supplements. However, for all other species, vitamin D status is maintained by exposure to solar ultraviolet light. Vitamin D requirements for laying hens are high because of the large quantities of calcium for eggshell formation and also because there is a loss of 1-2 pg of vitamin D in the yolk of each egg. The role of vitamin D in calcium homoeostasis for all species is discussed. INTRODUCTION Several thousand research papers on vitamin D and calcium homoeostasis have been published since the discovery in 1970 that vitamin D was metabolically transformed into a steroid hormone, 1,25 -dihydroxycholecal ciferol Studies have been made in a variety of animals with the assumption th.& for each species some unique characteristic of vitamin D metabblism would be found. Perhaps surprisingly, such is not the case for there is great similarity in the way vitamin D is handled in all animal species examined. Apart from intensively reared pigs and poultry, vitamin D is obtained by humans and other animals by exposure of their skin to solar ultraviolet radiation. For all species of land vertebrates there are few feedstuffs which contain more than trace amounts of vitamin D. Indeed, for humans, the only natural dietary sources of vitamin D of any quantitative significance are egg yolk, a few species of fatty fish and dairy products. In Australia, these sources have minimal impact on human vitamin D status which, as for other animals, is mainly determined by exposure to solar ultraviolet light. Vitamin D (cholecalciferol) formed photochemically in skin from 7-dehydrocholesterol is transported into the circulation bound to a specific vitamin D-binding protein. The subsequent conversion of vitamin D to 2-5hydrofltamin D [25(OH)D] in the liver and the further hydroxylation of 25(OH)D to 1,2S(OH)2D in the kidney are now so well known that this topic need not be reviewed again here. INTERPRETATION OF VITAMIN D METABOLITE CONCENTRATIONS Studies of vitamin D metabolism in vivo indicate that the more vitamin D that is given to an animal, the higher the concentration of 25(OH)D in plasma (Fraser 1980). Although the production of 25(OH)D is not directly proportional to vitamin D input, nevertheless concentration in plasma, within the good indicator of vitamin D supply. range 0.025-0.125 PM (lo-50 Thus, in temperate geographical regions the plasma concentration of 25(OH)D is highest in late summer and lowest in late winter. This reflects the seasonal change in the-intensity of solar ultraviolet-B radiation (290-320 nm) (Fraser 1983). However, even with extensive solar irradiation, in tropical regions or with whole-body exposure beside the sea in summer, the plasma concentration Department of Animal Husbandry, The University of Sydney, N.S.W. 2006. 194 of 25(OH)D rises to no higher than 0.2 FM (80 ng/ml). Evidently, the greatest rate of formation of vitamin D in skin cannot maintain 2!5(OH)D concentrations above this level. Nevertheless, the capacity to synthesize 2S(OH)D is considerably greater than the plasma levels produced by ultraviolet irradiation would suggest. Large oral doses of vitamin D, which give rise to signs of vitamin D toxicity, can raise the plasma concentration of 2S(OH)D to more than 1 FM (400 ng/ml). There is remarkable similarity in 25(OH)D concentrations in plasma among different species. Thus cows (Horst and Reinhardt 1982), sheep (Smith and Wright 1981), horses (Smith and Wright 1984), pigs (Goff et al. 1984), goats (Hines et al. 1986), camels (Shany et aZ. 1978) and chickens (L. Berven pers. comm.) all have 25(OH)D3 concentrations in plasma of between 0.025 and 0.125 crM. These observations lead to the conclusion plasma 2!5(OH)D concentration in all species is site of hydroxylation in the liver. Hence, these of vitamin D status and help to discriminate be other causes of bone disease. that a key factor determining the input of vitamin D to the plasma levels are a good index tween vitamin D deficiency and The concentration of l,w(oH)2D in lasma (0.072-0.123 nM) (3040 pg/ml) is lOOO-fold lower than that of 25 Q 0H)D. Furthermore, the 1,2!5(OH)2D concentration is mainly independent of the supply of the 2S(OH)D precursor. A multiplicity of physiological controls have been proclaimed to influence the formation of 1,2S(OH)2D in the cells of the proximal convoluted tubules in the kidney (Fraser 1980). The postulated controlling factors include parathyroid hormone (PTH), calcitonin, prolactin, growth hormone, insulin, glucocorticoids, gonadal steroids, calcium, phosphate, hydrogen ions, potassium and even 1,25(OH) D itself. Because of this multitude of factors claimed to regulate the renal ?-hydroxylase there is considerable uncertainty as to how to interpret the controlled production of 1,25(OH)2D. Because 1,25(OH)2D is a hormone, its formation is presumed regulated according to the requirements for its endocrine function. concentration in plasma in general bears no relationship to vitamin except in severe deficiency when there is insufficient 25(OH)D pre maintain the synthesis of 1,25(OH)2D. to be The D stat us cursor to The standard view of the regulated secretion of 1,2!5(OH) D is that this active metabolite is produced to maintain calcium homoeostasis ;b y stimulating target cells in the intestinal mucosa, in the renal tubules, and in bone to increase their tr nsport of calcium. Thus PTH, secreted in response to a fall in extracellular Ca5+ concentration, enhances the activity of the renal l-hydroxylase. The action of the extra 1,25(OH)2D in 'stimulating' the target cells, increases the extracellular Ca2+ concentration leading to a fall in PTH secretion. Such a negative feedback control is typical of the endocrine loops which link the secretion and function of peptide hormones. In general, however, steroid hormones have effects which appear to be permissive rather than stimulatory and such negative feedback loops do not occur. It may well be that the function of 1,25(OH)2D is permissive and not stimulatory, enabling cells to have variable capacity for transporting calcium. This interpretation is compatible with observations on the function of l,W(OH)2D and removes the need to find a s ecific biological role for each factor reported to influence the secretion of -1,25 OH)2D by the kidney. P Although the production of l,W(OH)2D appears to be independent of variation in the supply of 25(OH)D, concentrations of the two metabolites are related during growth (Stern et al. 1981) and during the recovery from vitamin 195 D deficiency (Stanbury 1981). In both these circumstances, the l-hydroxylase activity is elevated and the amount of 1,25(OH)zD produced is partly determined by the supply of 2S(OH)D. These fmdings support the concept that the l-hydroxylase is regulated by varying the accessibility of the 2S(OH)D substrate to the enzyme (Fraser 1980). They also reinforce the view that the concentration of 1,25(OH)zD in plasma cannot be related quantitatively to a required degree of response in target cells. THE ROLE OF VITAMIN D-BINDING PROTEIN IN PLASMA The affinity of bindin of 25(OH)D to the human vitamin D-binding protein (DBP) &=6.4x10-6 M) is higher than for 1,2!5(OH) D (Kd=3.4x10B7 M) or for vitamin D (cholecalciferol) itself &=4.3x10 -7 Mf (Haddad and Walgate 1976). This variation in binding affinity probably contributes to marked differences in the half-time or clearance of the metabolites from plasma. The ti for 25(OH)D is estimated in humans to be between 15 and 45 days (Clements et al. 1987b). In contrast, 1,25(OH) D, with its lower affinity for DBP is cleared from human plasma with a ha1? -time of about 5 to 8 hours (Gray et al. 1978). The prolonged time of clearance of 2S(OH)D has no apparent parallel with anv other plasma constituent. Other endocrine factors are cleared from the circulation in minutes or a few hours. The long time of residence of 2!5(OH)D in plasma is even more surprising, considering that the transporting DBP is cleared rapidly (t+ in rabbits = 1.7 days) (Haddad et aZ. 1981). This suggests that DBP, along with its associated 25(OH)D, is taken up by cells, the protein is degraded and 2S(OH)D is then released back into the circulation where it binds again to more DBP. The prolonged t+ of 2S(OH)D would thus represent a composite clearance curve derived from the repeated removal and re-entry of 2S(OH)D as DBP itself is turned over. This very long residence of 25(OH)D in extra-hepatic tissues could explain the ability of vitamin D reserves to be maintained for long periods of time. Studies in children have shown that only a few hours exposure to summer sunlight is able to produce sufficient vitamin D to avoid deficiency for several months (Poskitt et aZ. 1979). In contrast, in chickens, where affinity of DBP for 25(OH)D is 2-3-fold lower than in mammals (DeLuca et al. 1988), the rate of removal of 25(OH)D is 3 times faster so that without a continuous supply of vitamin D, deficiency rapidly develops (L. Berven pers. comm.). . Therefore, the association of 25(OH)D with DBP in the circulation provides a reserve of the precursor for l,%(OH)2D formation, it provides an accurate index of vitamin D status, and it provides a means for investigating the cause of vitamin D deficiency by st.udying the kinetics of 2!5(OH)D turnover in plasma. CALCIUM HOMOEOSTASIS Calcium h moeostasis is effectively the process of maintaining a constant extracellular Ca3 + concentration. In all vertebrate species this desired concentration is close to 1.25 mM (5 mg/ml) (Uristl963). In land vertebrates, the means of achieving this constancy are to increase the absorption ca acity 4 of the small intestine and to mobilize calcium from bone when the Ca-+ concentration- tends to fall. The main mechanism for preventing the Caz+ concentration from rising above the desired level is to increase excretion of calcium by the kidney. The vitamin D metabolite 1,25(OH)2D is the primary regulating factor determining changes in intestinal absorption capacity and bone resorption to 196 maintain the extracellular Ca2+ concentration. In comparison to its action in intestine and bone, vitamin D appears to have a uantitatively minor influence on calcium transport in the kidney (Costanzo 1974 . 3 Although the action of 1,2!5(OH)zD is frequently described as 'stimulating' intestinal calcium absorption and bone calcium resorption, this interpretation is possibly too simplistic. Most studies to identify the function of vitamin D in intestine and bone have made use of vitamin D-deficient animals. When such animals are repleted with vitamin D there is, after several hours delay, an increase in the absorption capacity for calcium across the mucosa of the small intestine. Likewise, as the abnormal rachitic bone is repaired, there is mobilization of mineraP from bone. Both these responses to vitamin D are inevitable consequences when the abnormal state of vitamin D deficiency is corrected. Because the ability to maintain calcium homoeostasis is impaired in vitamin D deficiency, then correction of this deficiency will activate mechanisms which control extracellular Ca2+ concentration. In animals with an adequate vitamin D status the action of 1,25(OH)2D on extracellular Ca2+ concentration appears to be that of a permissive fat or, enabling cells in intestine and bone to have the capacity to transport Cab +. This transporting mechanism could then be modified by other short-term regulators according to the immediate needs for calcium homoeostasis. Evidence has been found which suggests that PTH (Nemere and Norman 1986), growth hormone (Chipman et al. 1980) and even calcitonin (Jaeger et aZ. 1986) could be short-term modifiers of vitamin D-dependent active transport of calcium in the intestine. A similar interpretation can be made for the role of 1,25(OH)zD in bone. Experiments with bone in organ culture demonstrate that 1,25(OH)zD is a potent stimulator of osteoclastic bone resorption in vitro (Raisz et aZ. 1972). This reinforces the long-held view that the function of 1,2S(OH)zD in bone is to 'stimulate' resorption. If the concentration of 1,2S(OH) D in blood is experimentally raised in human subjects, then an enhance 2 rate of bone resor tion is indeed found, providing that the subjects are eating a low calcium diet P Maierhofer et al. 1983). Yet, if the supply of dietary calcium is adequate, an increase in serum level of 1,25(OH) D has no stimulatory effect on the resorption of bone (Maierhofer et al. 1884). These observations again suggest that 1,25(OH)zD has a permissive role, enabling bone cells to transport calcium. A homoeostatic increase in bone resorption could be mediated by PTH which activates the vitamin D-dependent calcium transport process when extracellular Ca2+ concentration falls. Perhaps the function of 1,2!5(OH D in bone may be a general one of giving cells the capability to handle Ca A so that normal growth and turnover of bone takes place. Such a role could apply also to the action of 1,25(OH)zD in cells not directly concerned with whole-body calcium homoeostasis. Any function of bone as a calcium reservoir must, of necessity, be a limited one in mammals. Some calcium is released from bone to compensate for the loss in milk durin lactation in women (Lamke et al. 1977) and dairy cows (Ramberg et al. 1970 * However, extensive mineral mobilization would 3 affect the mechanical properties of bone and diminish its structural strength. Hence, the main long-term control of calcium homoeostasis is at the level of absorption of ca1ciu.m by the small intestine. The regulated, vitamin D-dependent transport pathway accounts for about 75% of calcium absorbed by the small intestine from a diet adequate in calcium (Sheikh et d. 1988). The mechanism by which l,W(OH)2D promotes this absorption capacity is still uncertain despite the well-known action of 1,25(OH)2D to induce the synthesis of a specific calcium-binding protein 197 (CaBP, molecular weight = 8800) in the intestinal mucosa (for review see Lawson 1985). An elegant analysis by Bronner (1987) of the kinetics of calcium transport now suggests that CaBP facil itates the inward flux of Ca2+ by amplifying the intracellular calcium gradient between the brush border and basolateral poles of the mucosal cells. 'This interpretation of experimental and theoretical values for transcellular calcium movement is the most convincing analysis to date for the mechanism of action of 1,25(OH)2D on the absorption of calcium. Apart from endocrine control of absorption, another factor determining the supply of calcium to meet homoeostatic requirements is variation in the availability of calcium from the diet. The actual proportion of dietary calcium which is utilized is seldom more than % in humans and usually, in adults, is no more than % (Nordin et al. 1979). Values for domestic animals have not been determined. The formation of complexes with phytate (Wise 1983), oxalate (Johnston 1952) and unavailable carboh ydrate (dietary fiber) (James et (21. 1978) decreases the accessibilitv of calcium to the absorptive surface of the small intestine in monogastric animals. Therefore, when the intake of dietary calcium is low and it is in an unavailable form, anv increase in the absorptive capacity of the small intestine will be ineffective in raising the supply of * calcium. It is difficult to explain how calcium homoeostasis can be maintained in animals consuming diets which are both low in calcium and where the calcium is apparently unavailable for absorption by the small intestine. Experiments with rats (Favus 1985) and humans (Grinstead et al. 1984) have demonstrated that calcium can be absorbed from the large intestine and that the capacity for absorption is increased by 1,2S(OH)2D. Because bacteria in the large mtesii ne are able to break down any fiber and phvtate that has resisted dig$&tion in the small intestine, the calcium complexes ca&ied into the colon could become THE INFLUENCE OF CALCIUM SUPPLY ON VITAMIN D STATUS Studies with rats have shown that vitamin D deficiency can be induced bv feeding a diet where the calcium content or availability is low (Clements et d. 1987a).' Calcium deprivation promotes mild hyperparath@yroidism which stimulates the production of lZ(OH)2D However. the increased utilization of 25(OH)D for &25(OH)2D synihe`sis is%& the direct cause of depletion of vitamin D reserves. The extra 1,25(OH)2D has now been shown to enhance the liver in rats (Clements et al. of 2!5(OH)D, related to elevated has also been found in humans in the availability or supply of calcium could lead ncy. The enhanced metabolic destruction of thought to be a physiological mechanism for metabolism. Rather, this destruction would appear to be secondary to some 6th .er primary effect of l,w(OH)2D on liver function. Thus, an adequate supply of calcium may be as important for maintaining vitamin D status as it is for meeting the needs of calcium homoeostasis. Therefore, a deficiency to induced vitamin D deficie 25(OH)D in the liver is not regulating hepatic vitamin D 198 REFERENCES CHIPMAN, J.J., ZERWEKH, J., NICAR, M., MARKS, J., and PAK, C.Y.C. (1980). J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 51: 321. mm CLEMENTS, M.R., JOHNSON, L., and FRASER, D.R. (1987a). Nature Lond. 62. 324: CLEMENTS, M.R., DAVIES, M., FRASER, D.R., LUMB, G.A., MAWER, E.B., and ADAMS, P.H. (1987b). Clin. 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dc.publisher RAAN
dc.title Advances in vitamin D metabolism and calcium homoestasis in domestic species.
dc.type Research
dc.description.version Conference paper
dc.identifier.volume 10
dc.identifier.page 194


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