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Evidence that vitamin D is also stored in muscle cells – Sept 2013

Evidence for a Specific Uptake and Retention Mechanism for 25-Hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) in Skeletal Muscle Cells

Endocrinology September 1, 2013 vol. 154 no. 9 3022-3030
M. Abboud*, D. A. Puglisi*, B. N. Davies*, M. Rybchyn, N. P. Whitehead, K. E. Brock, L. Cole, C. Gordon-Thomson, D. R. Fraser and R. S. Mason
Department of Physiology and Bosch Institute (M.A., D.A.P., B.N.D., M.R., N.P.W., C.G.-T., R.S.M.), Faculty of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences (K.E.B.), Bosch Institute (L.C.), and Faculty of Veterinary Science (D.R.F.), University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Professor Rebecca S. Mason, Department of Physiology and Bosch Institute, Anderson Stuart Building F13, University of Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia. E-mail: rebeccam at physiol.usyd.edu.au.
↵* M.A., D.A.P., and B.N.D. contributed equally to this work.

Little is known about the mechanism for the prolonged residence time of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) in blood. Several lines of evidence led us to propose that skeletal muscle could function as the site of an extravascular pool of 25OHD. In vitro studies investigated the capacity of differentiated C2 murine muscle cells to take up and release 25OHD, in comparison with other cell types and the involvement of the membrane protein megalin in these mechanisms. When C2 cells are differentiated into myotubes, the time-dependent uptake of labeled 25OHD is 2–3 times higher than in undifferentiated myoblasts or nonmuscle osteoblastic MG63 cells (P < .001). During in vitro release experiments (after 25OHD uptake), myotubes released only 32% ± 6% stored 25OHD after 4 hours, whereas this figure was 60% ± 2% for osteoblasts (P < .01). Using immunofluorescence, C2 myotubes and primary rat muscle fibers were, for the first time, shown to express megalin and cubilin, endocytotic receptors for the vitamin D binding protein (DBP), which binds nearly all 25OHD in the blood. DBP has a high affinity for actin in skeletal muscle. A time-dependent uptake of Alexafluor-488-labeled DBP into mature muscle cells was observed by confocal microscopy. Incubation of C2 myotubes (for 24 hours) with receptor-associated protein, a megalin inhibitor, led to a 40% decrease in 25OHD uptake (P < .01).

These data support the proposal that 25OHD, after uptake into mature muscle cells, is held there by DBP, which has been internalized via membrane megalin and is retained by binding to actin.