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Vitamin D and Inflammatory Bowel Disease – review April 2015

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BioMed Research International, Volume 2015 (2015), 16 pages, http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/470805
Marco Ardesia,1 Guido Ferlazzo,2 and Walter Fries 3 fwalter at unime.it
1 Internal Medicine, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Messina, Messina, Italy
2 Laboratory of Immunology and Biotherapy, Department of Human Pathology, University of Messina, Messina, Italy
3 Clinical Unit for Chronic Bowel Disorders, IBD-UNIT, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Messina, Via Consolare Valeria 1, 98125 Messina, Italy

Vitamin D deficiency has been recognized as an environmental risk factor for Crohn’s disease since the early 80s. Initially, this finding was correlated with metabolic bone disease. Low serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels have been repeatedly reported in inflammatory bowel diseases together with a relationship between vitamin D status and disease activity. Subsequently, low serum vitamin D levels have been reported in various immune-related diseases pointing to an immunoregulatory role. Indeed, vitamin D and its receptor (VDR) are known to interact with different players of the immune homeostasis by controlling cell proliferation, antigen receptor signalling, and intestinal barrier function. Moreover, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D is implicated in NOD2-mediated expression of defensin-β2, the latter known to play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of Crohn’s disease (IBD1 gene), and several genetic variants of the vitamin D receptor have been identified as Crohn’s disease candidate susceptibility genes. From animal models we have learned that deletion of the VDR gene was associated with a more severe disease. There is a growing body of evidence concerning the therapeutic role of vitamin D/synthetic vitamin D receptor agonists in clinical and experimental models of inflammatory bowel disease far beyond the role of calcium homeostasis and bone metabolism.

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Vitamin D deficiency in patients with inflammatory bowel disease - Aug 2016
behind a GBP 25 paywall
Jane Fletcher
Nutrition Nurse Team Leader, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/bjon.2016.25.15.846

There are over 300 000 people in the UK affected by inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Though vitamin D deficiency is common in patients with IBD, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidance regarding vitamin D supplementation does not address the needs of patients with chronic inflammatory diseases. However, there is growing evidence that vitamin D plays an important role in the management of IBD. Nurses caring for patients with IBD should have an understanding of the causes and consequences of vitamin D deficiency in this patient group. This article looks at the role vitamin D plays in the body and the challenges of treating deficiency. Consideration is given to diet, sun exposure and supplementation as possible treatments and acknowledges the limitations of treatments for patients with IBD. With a lack of clear national guidance, it is hoped that raising awareness of these issues will inform nursing practice and ensure a holistic approach to care.

References are not behind the paywall


Vitamin D and the Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Bowel Disease - Oct 2016
Nutrition and Obesity, First Online: 18 August 2016, DOI: 10.1007/s11894-016-0526-9
Berkeley N. Limketkai, Matthew L. Bechtold, Douglas L. Nguyen

Vitamin D has traditionally been known for its role in bone metabolism, but emerging evidence has suggested a broader role for vitamin D in immune regulation. Vitamin D deficiency has been associated with the pathogenesis of diverse autoimmune disorders and has similarly been implicated as a contributor to inflammatory bowel disease. In this review, we discuss animal, in vitro, genetic, and epidemiologic studies that have linked vitamin D deficiency with inflammatory bowel disease pathogenesis or severity. Nonetheless, we present the caveat in interpreting these studies in the context of reverse causation: Does vitamin D deficiency lead to gastrointestinal disease, or does gastrointestinal disease (with related changes in dietary choices, intestinal absorption, nutritional status, lifestyle) lead to vitamin D deficiency?

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The 94 references are free, however

1. Introduction

Vitamin D is a fat-soluble vitamin whose active form, calcitriol or 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25(OH)2D3), regulates bone, calcium, and phosphorus metabolism [1]. However, vitamin D also influences immune system function, and deficiency has been recognized as an environmental risk factor for autoimmune diseases like Crohn’s disease (CD) [2].

In humans, vitamin D may be obtained from two sources: diet (as fat-soluble vitamin) and by ultraviolet- (UV-) mediated synthesis in the epidermal layer of the skin where UV-rays promote photolytic cleavage of 7-dihydrocholesterol (7-HDC) into vitamin D3 [3]. The latter is the most important source of this metabolite and, at this point, vitamin D can be considered as a hormone [4]. After production, vitamin D is activated by a two-step hydroxylation, first in the carbon 5-position by 25-hydroxylase in the liver then by 1α-hydroxylase in the kidney: this active metabolite exerts its functions by interacting with the vitamin D receptor (VDR), a receptor that belongs to the superfamily of nuclear hormone receptors [1]. Binding to VDR leads to the transcription of several vitamin D-response genes, located on single loci [5]. Various tissues and, especially, immune-related cells express VDRs and are able to produce 1,25(OH)2D3. This implies that the vitamin exerts its action beyond its classic hormonal-endocrine function tending towards an autocrine role [6].

2. Vitamin D and Its Role in Immune Regulation

Vitamin D affects the immune system acting at various levels, such as antibacterial response, antigen presentation, and regulation of adaptive and innate immunity. Genome-wide analysis has revealed that a large number of genes are influenced by vitamin D levels [7]. VDRs have been discovered in almost all immune cells as activated or naïve CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, B cells, neutrophils, and antigen-presenting cells (APCs) such as dendritic cells and macrophages. In particular, vitamin D3 enhances the chemotactic and phagocytic responses of macrophages and production of antimicrobial proteins, such as cathelicidin, inhibits the surface expression of the MHC-II-complex antigen and costimulatory molecules and downregulates the production of many proinflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin- (IL-) 1, IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α [4, 8]. An experimental study demonstrated that transferring CD8+ T cells isolated from the spleen of wild type (WT) and IL-10 KO mice into immunodeficient Rag KO recipients, that is, mice with no mature B or T cells, did not induce colitis, whereas transferring CD8+ T cells from VDR KO mice led to colonic inflammation, and transferring CD8+ T cells from IL-10/VDR KO mice led to fulminant colitis. These data indicate that expression of VDR is required to prevent replication of quiescent CD8+ T cells and that the lack of VDR induced the formation of more aggressive T cells [9]. Another study evaluated the difference of protein expression in the small intestinal mucosa between WT mice and VDR KO mice identifying a higher expression of proteins involved in cell adhesion, proliferation, and migration and stress response in VDR KO mice. The authors conclude that vitamin D and VDR play a direct, or indirect role, in balancing these functions [10].

Vitamin D/VDR status regulates development, function, and balance of T-lymphocytes dampening T-helper- (Th-) 1 cell function and cytokine patterns (IL-2 and interferon-γ (IFN-γ)) by enhancing the Th-2 cell response (IL-4, IL-5, and IL-10) [11]; moreover 1,25(OH)2D3 promotes a regulatory outcome through the inhibition of Th-17 cells and their related cytokines, and the induction of regulatory T cells (Treg) that are protective against autoimmunity, stimulating the expression of the cytotoxic T-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) and forkhead box P3 (Foxp-3), together with the induction of IL-10 [12, 13]. In addition, 1,25(OH)2D3 appears to have a chemopreventive role through an antiproliferative action, for example, through VDR-mediated inhibition of the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway [8, 14, 15], inhibiting growth without inducing apoptosis and inducing differentiation in colon cancer cell lines [16, 17].

The molecular and genetic link between CD and the vitamin D/immune system axis may be in part explained by the NOD2 gene (Figure 1). The precise etiology of the inflammatory bowel disease CD is unknown. Like many chronic diseases, there are environmental factors that act on a polygenic background. Variants of the NOD2/CARD15 gene are associated with the development and phenotypic patterns of CD. This gene encodes for a protein of the family of intracellular pattern recognition receptors for bacterial components that play an important role in the innate immune system [18, 19]. Transcription of the NOD2 gene is stimulated by 1,25(OH)2D3/VDR and signaling through NOD2 induces expression of DEFB2/HBD2 which stands for the antimicrobial peptide beta-defensin 2, and of CAMP which codifies for cathelicidin [20]. In a study on a VDR KO model, a downregulation of the ATG16L1 gene, together with a reduced expression of lysozyme by Paneth cells was reported [21]. These mice had an increased susceptibility to dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) colitis, whereas in human colon samples of low VDR expression correlate with ATG16L1 and a reduction of Bacteroides species. This finding implies that alterations of the vitamin D status might interfere with autophagy and alter the antimicrobial barrier of the intestinal mucosa and, consequently, the control of the microbiota [22].
Image

  • Scenario A: reduced UV exposure as risk factor for CD and for hospitalizations and surgery [86];
  • Scenario B: NOD2 gene transcription is stimulated by 1,25(OH)2D3/VDR and signaling through NOD2 induces expression of DEFB2/HBD2 which stands for beta-defensin 2 and cathelicidin [20];
  • Scenarios C and D: variants or loss of function of VDR may lead to changes of the microbiota and reduce host defense
    by reducing production of cathelicidin, lysozyme, and ATG16L1 protein (autophagy) [21, 22];
  • Scenario E: experimental studies with vitamin D or its analogues showing inhibitory effects on
    PBMC, LPMC, dendritic cells, and fibroblasts in terms of cytokine production and differentiation (Table 3).

VDR: vitamin D receptor; NOD: nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain.

3. VDR Polymorphisms in IBD

From the above, it appears that variants of VDR interfere with the immune system and, thus, may contribute to susceptibility to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) [23, 24]. In fact, VDR polymorphisms have been identified in various diseases, such as cancer [25] or cancer risk [26], asthma [27], and kidney diseases [28]. The best-studied polymorphisms include BsmI (rs1544410), FokI (rs2228570), TaqI (rs731236), and ApaI (rs7975232). However, the results of these still few studies in IBD patients are contradictory (Table 1): for example, no statistical significance compared to controls was found in two studies on IBD patients for BsmI, FokI, TaqI, and ApaI [29, 30] with a borderline significance for heterozygous carriage of the FokI allele [29]. In three Chinese studies on ulcerative colitis (UC) patients [31, 32] and on CD patients, no difference [32] or an association of the Bb genotype of the BsmI variant with UC [31] was reported; whereas no association was found for ApaI, TaqI, and BsmI with CD [33].

Table 1: Genetic polymorphisms and IBD (chronological order).
In another study on European Caucasian patients, a significantly higher frequency of the TaqI polymorphism (genotype “tt”) was reported in CD compared to UC or HC [23]. This finding was replicated in German IBD patients where the “tt” genotype was significantly more frequent in fistulizing and stenosing CD [24]. Subsequently, always in Caucasians, the finding of a lack of association of ApaI but a more frequent presence of TaqI in male IBD patients was reported [34] and confirmed 3 years later [35].

Concerning BsmI polymorphisms, the BB genotype was more frequent in Ashkenazi UC patients compared to Ashkenazi controls [36]. Finally, in a mixed IBD population investigating all 4 VDR variants, only the Fok I variant (“ff” genotype) was significantly more frequent in IBD patients [37].

Two recent meta-analyses including the same 9 studies with slightly different patient numbers (Table 1) yielded different results [38, 39]; Xue et al. [38] found that the “ff” genotype of FokI was associated with a significant risk for UC in Asians, whereas the “tt” genotype of TaqI was associated with an increased risk for CD in Europeans, but with an increased risk for both diseases, CD and UC, in Asian males. Carriage of the “a” allele (ApaI) resulted protective from CD. In contrast, Wang et al. [39] concluded that there was no association between ApaI, BsmI, and FokI and IBD, whereas subgroup analysis evidenced an increased risk for CD for ApaI and limited to East Asians, for BsmI. Conversely, TaqI variants reduced the risk for UC in Caucasians.

One study examined the influence of VDR polymorphisms on serum vitamin D levels [40] (not included in Table 1) showing a significant association of variants of the TaqI and the signal peptide, CUB domain, and EGF-like 3 (SCUBE3, rs732594) genes, the latter encodes for a protein involved in the VDR pathway, in CD patients, whereas ApaI and SCUBE3 and two variants of PHD finger protein-11 (PHF-11) gene, namely, rs2980 and rs2981, showed a significant association with serum vitamin D levels in CD patients. PHF-11 variants have been shown to be involved with vitamin D levels in other pathologies, such as asthma [41].

Besides investigations on VDR variants, 2 SNPs of the vitamin D-binding protein (DBP), that is, the 416 variant Glu (rs7041) and the 420 variant Lys (rs4588), were analysed. A significantly reduced frequency of the 420 variant Lys was found in IBD patients compared to controls [42].

In conclusion, the influence of VDR variants on IBD risk is still poorly defined. Interesting approaches are represented by investigations on the association between polymorphisms and vitamin D levels and those examining proteins involved in vitamin D-related pathways, but all need further studies and confirmation.

Starting in the late seventies, investigations on the vitamin D status of IBD patients have been carried out with different methodological approaches and results. By comparing IBD patients (CD alone or mixed populations) versus healthy controls (HC), no differences were found for circulating 25(OH)D3 concentrations in 6 studies on adult IBD populations [43–48] and in 1 study on a pediatric cohort [49], whereas lower plasma levels were reported in undernourished CD patients [50], in CD patients after intestinal resections [51], in 2 studies on adult, and in 1 study on pediatric CD patients [52–54] and in 3 mixed IBD populations [55–57].

Comparing 25(OH)D3 levels between CD and UC patients, no differences were found in 8 studies on adult or pediatric patients in basal conditions [47, 54, 55, 57–61] and in 1 pediatric study on partially vitamin D supplemented patients [62]. Lower levels in CD compared with UC were found in 5 studies [46, 63–66].

Finally, investigations concerning the active form of vitamin D, 1,25(OH)2D3, reported normal levels after bowel resections in CD [67] but no differences between well- and undernourished CD patients compared to HC or in well-nourished UC patients [50]. Similar findings were reported in a pediatric study including CD, UC and HC [61]. Lower 1,25(OH)2D3 concentrations compared to controls were found in 2 studies including CD and UC patients [45, 68]. Conversely, elevated levels of 1,25(OH)2D3 were reported after ileal resections in CD [51]. In this latter study, a positive correlation with 25(OH)D3 levels and PTH was reported.

Changing methodology and introducing vitamin D reference values as parameter, the importance of vitamin D in IBD has become more convincing. Defining vitamin sufficiency as serum values above 30 ng/mL, vitamin D insufficiency as values between 10/20 and 30 ng/mL, and vitamin deficiency as concentrations below 10 to 15 ng/mL, data from 27 studies from all over the world were available [44, 46, 52, 53, 56–58, 60, 61, 63, 64, 69–77], 6 of them on cohorts over 100 participants [59, 62, 66, 78–80], and one with more than 1,000 patients [81]. In synthesis, vitamin deficiency was found in 8-100% of patients with CD and in 15-60% of patients with UC, vitamin insufficiency in 12-72.3% in CD or in mixed IBD populations and in 7-64% of UC patients. Five papers [53, 61, 74, 76, 82] differentiated vitamin D levels according to seasonal variations in CD patients reporting vitamin deficiency in 50–76% in winter and in 10–19% in summer months; vitamin insufficiency, where reported [76, 82], was indicated in 73–100% in winter and 55–59% in summer months.

Studies evaluating vitamin D levels in IBD patients were all conducted after disease onset and established diagnosis, but it is not clear if vitamin D deficiency is the cause or a consequence. Pathogenesis of vitamin D hypovitaminosis in patients with IBD may depend on various mechanisms such as decreased exposure to sunlight or oral vitamin D intake, ileal resections leading to malabsorption or a disturbed enterohepatic circulation, and/or increased losses through the gastrointestinal system by protein-losing enteropathy [59].

To identify the reasons for the differences of the vitamin D status, the ability to absorb vitamin D2 was evaluated in a study by Farraye et al. [77] comparing CD patients and HC. In this study, 42% of CD patients were vitamin D deficient 25(OH)D3 (≤20 ng/mL), while 29% were insufficient (25(OH)D3: 21–29 ng/mL); 12 h after ingesting 50,000 IU of vitamin D2, circulating levels of this metabolite were significantly lower in CD compared with HC indicating a significant 30% reduction of the ability to absorb vitamin D2. In another study, on 31 CD patients and 15 HC, the capacity of absorbing orally administered vitamin D (5 μg of 25(OH)D3/kg body weight) was evaluated; 10% of CD patients showed decreased absorption of 25(OH)D3 after 4 and 8 hours [71]. Finally, a wide variability of absorption of vitamin D2 was reported in vitamin deficient and insufficient CD patients, but vitamin D2 absorption was significantly reduced compared with HC [77].

Several studies evaluated factors influencing vitamin D status hypothesizing reduced sun exposure as cause for hypovitaminosis, since a geographical north-south gradient was noted also for other autoimmune T helper- (Th-) 1-mediated diseases, like multiple sclerosis. The link between this gradient and the pathophysiological mechanisms that involve vitamin D status depends not only on dietary intake but also from UV exposure [83]. Indeed, a negative association between sun exposure and lower levels of 25(OH)D in CD was reported in Indian patients [52] and, most recently, also in Dutch CD [84] where reduced exposure to sunlight (defined as no sunny holidays, no solarium use, and more sun protection) was associated with low 25(OH)D serum levels.

The relationship between sun exposure and the risk of developing CD or UC has been investigated by Nerich et al. [85]. High residential sunlight exposure was associated with a significant decreased risk of CD, but not UC. Four years later, the same group published similar results, that is, an increased incidence of CD with reduced sunlight exposure, in a cohort of women living in France, whereas vitamin D intake was not associated with a risk reduction in CD or UC [86].

Reduced UV exposure seems therefore not only to increase risk for CD, but it also seems associated with a worse outcome of disease. In a recent nationwide North-American study, the influence of UV exposure on hospitalization rates, length of hospital stay, and surgeries was investigated in an impressive number of IBD patients (649,932 CD, 384,267 UC, and 288,894,297 non-IBD controls). Reduced UV exposure led to significantly longer hospitalizations in all groups and to more frequent intestinal surgeries and deaths in CD [87]. Data on 25(OH)D3 were not available in this study. The finding that more UV exposure is associated with a minor number of surgical procedures in CD was confirmed in a subsequent study on 481,712 CD-related hospitalizations reporting 67,751 major surgical procedures [88].

Finally, a prospective cohort study of 72,179 women enrolled in the Nurses’ Health Study addressed the question if vitamin D hypovitaminosis may, per se, represent a risk factor for the development of IBD. Incident cases of CD and UC were recorded over a follow-up period of 22 years. A 25(OH)D3 prediction score based on diet and lifestyle was developed and validated against effectively measured levels of 25(OH)D3. The authors showed that higher predicted plasma levels of 25(OH)D3 were associated with a significant risk reduction for CD but not for UC, suggesting that vitamin D status may contribute to the pathogenesis of CD [89].

After a series of contradictory and mostly negative studies on vitamin D levels in IBD patients compared with HC, more conclusive data have been produced introducing reference values. However, most of these studies have been aimed to investigate bone and calcium metabolism. Recent large cohort studies investigating UV exposure or vitamin D status estimating the risk to develop IBD have pushed forward our understanding on the potential role of vitamin D in the context of IBD.

5. Vitamin D Status and Clinical Outcome in IBD Patients

Several studies concerning the relationship between vitamin D status and clinical outcome in IBD patients have been published (Table 2). Almost 30 years ago, 25(OH)D3 levels in active CD were found to be lower than in quiescent CD [50]. Twenty years later, another study showed that low serum 25(OH)D3 levels were predicted by disease duration and activity scores in both, CD and UC [46]. This inverse association between disease activity and serum 25(OH)D3 levels was confirmed in a small prospective study in CD [52] and in a retrospective study on a much larger, mixed IBD population [59]. In this latter study, low serum 25(OH)D3 levels were associated with higher clinical activity scores in CD and in UC, but not with the risk for medical or surgical hospitalizations. Moreover, regression analysis found that low vitamin D levels were independently associated with quality of life (QoL) in CD patients but not in UC patients. A reduced QoL was reproduced by another study where vitamin insufficient patients had significantly lower QoL scores than those who were sufficient [82]. Finally, in a mixed IBD population, an inverse correlation between serum 25(OH)D3 concentrations and fecal calprotectin, a marker for gut inflammation, was found whereas serum CRP as a marker of systemic inflammation did not correlate with 25(OH)D3 levels [90].

Table 2: Vitamin D versus disease activity and outcome in IBD (chronological order)



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Table 3: Therapeutic studies in experimental and human IBD (chronological order)



Image Image Image


Conversely, other studies on CD and UC patients failed to show a correlation between serum 25(OH)D3 levels and disease activity [60]. The same findings, that is, no association between 25(OH)D3 concentrations and disease activity, were published on a pediatric IBD population [54].

Going beyond disease activity, in a prospective study on the largest multicenter cohort involving 3,217 patients, low plasma 25(OH)D3 levels (<20 ng/mL) were associated with an increased risk of hospitalizations and surgery for CD as well as for UC patients [81]. In a subset of CD patients, but not UC patients, who normalized vitamin D status, a reduction of CRP levels and the need for hospitalizations was observed.

The likelihood for developing Clostridium difficile (Cl) colitis related to vitamin D status was investigated retrospectively. There was an increased risk for developing Cl colitis in patients with low plasma 25(OH)D3 levels (<20 ng/mL), and an increase by 1 ng/mL of 25(OH)D3 was accompanied by a 4% risk reduction of developing Cl colitis. Lastly, death from Cl colitis occurred in those with lower 25(OH)D3 levels compared with survivors [91]. A recent study investigated the relationship between 25(OH)D3 concentrations and duration of anti-TNF therapy in IBD patients. Interestingly, low vitamin D levels were associated with loss of response during maintenance therapy in CD patients [92], whereas serum 25(OH)D3 levels increased with anti-TNF therapy [93].

The only study that investigated plasma 1,25(OH)2D3 levels found no association between 1,25(OH)2D3 levels and CDAI or CAI in Japanese patients [68].

From the above, it appears that low vitamin D is inversely correlated to disease activity documented by clinical scores and surrogate markers of inflammation such as CRP and fecal calprotectin; moreover, low levels were also associated with clinical outcomes, that is, surgery, response to anti-TNF therapy, Cl superinfection, and, finally, death. Inflammation per se has been shown to upregulate conversion from 25(OH)D3 to 1,25(OH)2D3 which may lead to a reduction of available 25(OH)D3. In this discussion, an observation of two recent papers may be relevant, coming from orthopaedic surgery, showing an acute reduction of 25(OH)D3 levels following a systemic inflammatory response induced by surgery, considering serum 25(OH)D3 as a negative acute phase reactant [94, 95].

6. Therapeutic Studies In Vitro and in Experimental Animals

As a result of this evidence, vitamin D should be proposed as a therapy for IBD. Several experimental studies, both on animals and IBD patients, have been carried out (Table 3). Starting with the former, in a model of spontaneous colitis, interleukin- (IL-) 10 knock-out (KO) mice on a vitamin D deficient diet showed growth retardation and weight loss, together with a high mortality rate (58% at week 9) compared to mice on a vitamin D sufficient diet; 1,25(OH)2D3 (0.005 μg/day) supplementation starting from week 2 reduced weight loss and ameliorated histology scores, but vitamin D supplementation after symptom onset at week 7 (1,25(OH)2D3, 0.2 μg/day) did not induce significant differences compared with untreated animals, except for bowel weight indicating a reduction of inflammation in supplemented animals [96]. In another study, the efficacy of a low calcemic vitamin D analogue (22-ene-25-oxa-vitamin D (ZK156979)) was investigated in 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS) colitis [97]. Treatment was performed with 1,25(OH)2D3 (0.2 μg/kg) versus ZK156979 (0.1–2.0 μg/kg), both administered intraperitoneally (i.p.) before or after colitis induction. Assessment of inflammation and colitis severity was established by scoring colitis, macroscopic and histological analysis, and measurement of myeloperoxidase activity (MPO) and cytokine levels. The authors found that ZK156978 reduced the severity of TNBS-induced colitis with a potency comparable with that of 1,25(OH)2D3, downregulating MPO activity, tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) tissue levels, and T-box transcription factor (T-bet) expression, together with an increase of interleukin IL-10 and IL-4 tissue concentrations, without calcemic effects.

Laverny et al. [98] studied the effect of an intrarectally administered vitamin D receptor agonist (1α,25(OH)2-16-ene-20-cyclopropyl-vitamin D3; BXL-62) in C57Bl/6 mice with dextran-sodium sulfate- (DSS-) induced (3%) colitis. BXL-62 treatment (1 μg/kg) compared to 1,25(OH)2D3 (0.3 μg/kg) was superior in preventing weight loss and visible fecal blood, together with better stool consistency and histology scores without inducing hypercalcemia. Another synthetic vitamin D agonist, 1α,25(OH)2-19-nor-14,20-bisepi-23-yne-vitamin D3 (TX527), has been shown to attenuate inflammation in the DSS model of colitis by downregulating IL-1, IL-6, IFN-γ, and TNF-α as well as the gastrointestinal glutathione peroxidase 2 [99].

There are three very interesting studies which associate vitamin D or its receptor with intestinal microbiota. First, in Cyp27b1-KO mice, that is, mice unable to produce 1,25(OH)2D3, an increased susceptibility to DSS colitis was observed [100]. Oral vitamin supplementation reduced weight loss, whereas treatment with antibiotics greatly attenuated colitis. In these mice, a reduced expression of E-cadherin on epithelial and immune cells was observed pointing towards a more “leaky” gut. Moreover, a reduced number of tolerogenic dendritic cells were observed in the gut of Cyp27b1-KO mice. In these mice, as well as in VDR-KO mice, dysbiosis of the microbiota was observed with an increase of the Helicobacteraceae family and a reduction of the Firmicutes and Deferribacteres phyla. The authors concluded that vitamin D (production or its receptor) is involved in the regulation of the gut microbiota. Second, DSS-induced colitis was reduced together with a lower penetration of adherent-invasive E. coli (AIEC) in mice on a vitamin-sufficient diet compared to those fed a vitamin D deficient diet. Moreover, vitamin D hypovitaminosis and DSS colitis led to an increase of Bacteroidetes. In the same paper in Caco cells incubated with or without vitamin D and then challenged with AIEC, vitamin D maintained transepithelial resistance and prevented tight junctional protein redistribution [101]. The third paper, that reported changes of the microbiota related to interference in the vitamin D system, assessed susceptibility to DSS colitis in conditional VDR KO mice (deletion restricted to the intestinal epithelial cells), along with Paneth cell quantity and quality by means of quantification of lysozyme and ATG16L1 protein expression. The latter is a protein involved in autophagy, and its genetic variants are well known as risk factors for CD. In this model, an increase of E. coli and Bacteroides, together with a decrease of butyrate producing bacteria was reported. Supplementing butyrate to IL-10 KO mice reverses reduced VDR and ATG16L1 expression. Similar results, that is, an increased expression of VDR and ATG16L1, were obtained incubating several cell lines with butyrate [21].

Finally, a reduction of intestinal fibrosis, assessed by production of extracellular matrix and total collagen, was seen in mice with TNBS colitis on a vitamin supplemented diet compared to mice fed a vitamin D deficient diet [102]. Moreover, in isolated subepithelial myofibroblasts from the colon, a vitamin D sufficient diet reduced concentrations of TGF-β1, Smad 3, p-Smad 3, and collagen I. It was concluded that preventive vitamin D administration reduces fibrosis inhibiting the VDR-mediated TGF-β1/Smad 3 pathway.

In the above studies, in various types of spontaneous or chemically induced colitis and in several cell lines, vitamin D and synthetic agonists have been shown to reduce colitis severity and intestinal fibrosis. Vitamin D hypovitaminosis or knocking down Cyp27b1 or VDR had the opposite results. Interestingly, these latter conditions were all associated with changes of the intestinal microbiota.

7. Therapeutic Studies in Human Ex Vivo Preparations

In an ex vivo study on PBMC obtained from IBD patients and incubated in the presence of 1,25(OH)2D3, a reduction of interferon- (IFN-) γ and an increase of IL-10 production were observed in PBMC from UC patients whereas in CD the production of TNF-α were reduced [103]. The effect of orally administered vitamin D3 on monocyte-depleted PBMC from vitamin D3-treated (1200 IU vitamin D daily over 1 year) versus placebo-treated patients was investigated [104]. CD4+ T-cell proliferation and T-cell cytokine production were assessed. IL-6 production in vitamin D3-treated patients increased, whereas TNF-α, IFN-γ, and IL-4 did not. No change was observed for IL-10 and the percentage of the CD4+, CD25+, and Foxp3+ regulatory T cells compared to placebo. The amount of proliferating CD4+ T cells was significantly increased (from 41% to 56%) in the vitamin-D-treated group.

Another ex vivo study employed the vitamin D analogue (19-nor-14,20-bisepi-23-yne-1,25(OH)2D3; TX 527). This analogue significantly inhibited PBMC proliferation and TNF-α release in CD and HC [105]. The increase of VDR protein levels after incubation with TX 527 was higher in CD compared with HC. Moreover, in PBMC of both, HC and CD, stimulated with TNF-α, a decrease in nuclear NF-κB protein levels together with an increase in cytoplasmic IKB-α levels were observed pointing to an inhibition of TNF-α induced effects on PBMC exerted by the vitamin D analogue.

The effect of the vitamin receptor agonist BXL-62 on PBMC from CD and UC patients and lamina propria mononuclear cells (LPMC) obtained from biopsies of two CD (ileum) and two UC (colon) patients was investigated [98]. After incubation, in LPS-stimulated PBMC and in activated LPMC from IBD patients, BXL-62 significantly inhibited, with a significantly higher potency compared with 1,25(OH)2D3, TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-12/23p40 transcription and cytokine concentrations measured in culture supernatants without differences between CD and UC.

In PBMC of CD patients, expression of the CYP27B1 gene, that is, the gene that encodes the enzyme that converts 25(OH)D3 to 1,25(OH)2D3, and that of the VDR gene was investigated, showing a higher expression in active compared to inactive disease [93]. Moreover, CD4+ T cells incubated in the presence of vitamin D showed a threefold increase of CD25+ cells.

Finally, the effect of oral vitamin D supplementation on the maturation and cytokine production of monocyte-derived dendritic cells of CD patients was studied [106]. Compared to placebo-treated CD patients, vitamin D supplementation led to reduced CD80 expression in LPS-stimulated dendritic cells together with reduced production of IL-10, IL-1β, and IL-6.

8. Therapeutic Studies in Human IBD

There are only few studies with vitamin D addressing the clinical course of IBD (Table 3). In one of these studies, the effect of supplementation of the active form of vitamin D 1,25(OH)2D3 (aVD, 1000 IU 1.25(OH)2D3 daily) versus the plain vitamin D 25(OH)D (pVD; 2 × 0.25 μg alphacalcidiol daily) was investigated in CD patients in clinical remission (CDAI < 150) [107]. Both groups received oral calcium supplementation (1000 mg/day). At 6 weeks, the mean CDAI and IBDQ scores, as well as the CRP concentrations, decreased in the aVD-treated group, but not in the pVD-treated group. These differences between the groups however disappeared by week 52. Serum calcium concentrations did not change at any time point. Jørgensen et al. [108] performed a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled multicenter study to assess the benefit of vitamin D3 treatment in CD. They included 94 CD patients in clinical (CDAI < 150) and biochemical remission, randomized to receive 1200 IU of vitamin D3 + 1200 mg of calcium or 1200 mg of calcium alone. During 1-year follow-up, serum 25(OH)D3 levels increased significantly in vitamin D-supplemented patients, on average from 27 to 38 ng/mL, but free serum calcium did not change. The relapse rate (defined as increase of CDAI >70 over baseline and CDAI ≥150) was not significantly lowered. Adjustment for the use of azathioprine and smoking resulted in minor changes of the risk estimate. However, the authors concluded that vitamin D might be effective in CD but claimed the need for larger studies.

In an uncontrolled study, 18 active CD patients were initially treated with 1000 IU vitamin D daily over 2 weeks. Thereafter, the dose was escalated (to a maximum of 5000 IU) until a serum concentration of 40 ng/mL of 25(OH)D3 was reached [109]. After 24 weeks, a significant reduction of the CDAI and an improvement of the IBDQ score were observed. No differences were observed for CRP, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), TNF-α, IL-17, IL-10, and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Data on serum calcium levels were not reported.

In this last paragraph, the therapeutic effects of vitamin D supplementation on disease activity mainly given to patients in remission yielded modest results; the daily administered dose ranged in these studies between 1000 and 5000 IU, with an increase of serum vitamin D levels but apparently without hypercalcemia.

9. Conclusions

Literature data highlighting the importance of vitamin D in different aspects of immune regulation, for example, in chronic immune-mediated diseases and cancer, suggest considering this metabolite not simply as a vitamin involved in bone and calcium homeostasis but as an autocrine mediator with an active role in numerous physiological processes, particularly in the innate immune system. Since most studies concerning the calcium status in IBD yielded contradictory data, in the most recent literature, the discussion has focused on the possible role of vitamin D as a risk factor for the onset and evolution of gut inflammation. The potential role of 25(OH)2D as negative acute phase reactant has yet to be proven in IBD but may explain its frequently reduced levels in active disease. Besides lower vitamin D levels due to reduced UV exposure, genetic induced loss of function of VDR may contribute to defects involving vitamin D pathways. It has been shown in VDR KO animals that this deletion profoundly alters innate immune response and the gut microbiota. Further studies in this field are needed to provide more insight in the link between vitamin D/VDR and bowel inflammation.

Simple vitamin D supplementation does not seem to lead to significant improvement of the clinical course of IBD but may be indicated for a subset of patients. Vitamin D synthetic analogues of vitamin D seem to be more promising, at least in animal studies and in ex vivo experiments.

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