Crosstalk between vitamin D axis, inflammation and host immunity mechanisms: A prospective study.
Meca. Andreea-Daniela AD; Ștefănescu. Simona S; Bogdan. Maria M; Turcu-Știolică. Adina A; Nițu. Floarea Mimi FM; Matei. Marius M; Cioboată. Ramona R; Bugă. Ana Maria AM; Pisoschi. Cătălina-Gabriela CG
Key Findings
- TB patients start with low 25‑(OH)-vitamin D which increases after two months of therapy
- Higher vitamin D correlates with better TB treatment outcomes
- Culture‑negative patients had lower LL‑37, beclin‑1 (autophagy) and M30 (apoptosis) levels than culture‑positive patients
Practical Outcomes
- Keeping vitamin D levels sufficient may support immune function, especially during infections. While the study doesn’t give a specific dose, biohackers can consider regular vitamin D testing and supplementation to stay in the optimal range. Monitoring LL‑37 isn’t practical for most, but focusing on vitamin D is a simple, evidence‑backed step.
Summary
The study found that people with active TB had low vitamin D levels, which rose after two months of standard TB drugs. Those whose infection cleared showed lower levels of the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 and markers of cell cleanup (autophagy and apoptosis) compared to those still infected, suggesting vitamin D and these immune pathways are linked to treatment success.
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a public health burden, after many years at attempts for its eradication. Vitamin D (VD) status has been suggested to be related to TB susceptibility because it has the ability to regulate multiple axes of the innate and adaptive host immune response. VD mediates cathelicidin (LL-37) synthesis, a cationic bactericidal peptide, through the expression of vitamin D receptor (VDR). Host innate defense mechanisms include autophagy and apoptosis of alveolar macrophages. The present study aimed to assess the relationship between VD status, inflammation and host defense mechanisms before and after two months of first-line anti-TB pharmacotherapy. The study included newly diagnosed individuals with pulmonary TB without co-morbidities (HIV infection, diabetes, cancer) and without VD supplementation or other therapies interfering with VD serum levels. We measured serum levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-(OH)-D), the major circulating form of vitamin D, VDR, LL-37, beclin-1 (an autophagy marker) and M30 (an apoptosis biomarker) before and after two months of anti-TB treatment. Individuals presented lower levels of 25-(OH)-D before receiving first-line anti-TB treatment (T0) in comparison with its plasmatic levels after two-months of therapy (T2). At T2, patients were divided in two subgroups according the results of sputum-culture conversion. After two-months of therapy, decreased values of LL-37, beclin-1 and M30 were observed in the culture-negative patients compared to the culture-positive patients. Control of anti-TB treatment outcome could be improved by appraisal of VD status and host defense mechanisms such as autophagy and apoptosis.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-04-14T00:00:00.000Z
10.3892/etm.2021.10040
10
21