The relationship of serum vitamins A, D, E and LL-37 levels with allergic status, tonsillar virus detection and immune response.
Elenius. Varpu V; Palomares. Oscar O; Waris. Matti M; Turunen. Riitta R; Puhakka. Tuomo T; Rückert. Beate B; Vuorinen. Tytti T; Allander. Tobias T; Vahlberg. Tero T; Akdis. Mübeccel M; Camargo. Carlos A CA; Akdis. Cezmi A CA; Jartti. Tuomas T
Key Findings
- Higher vitamin D is associated with reduced allergic rhinitis and higher IL‑37 expression in tonsils
- Higher vitamin A correlates with increased IFN‑γ and a trend toward fewer detected respiratory viruses
- Higher LL‑37 levels are linked to lower expression of FOXP3, RORC2 and IL‑17, suggesting modulation of regulatory and Th17 immune pathways
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, focusing on adequate vitamin D and E intake may help lower allergy risk. Vitamin A could support antiviral defenses, especially in younger individuals. Directly increasing LL‑37 isn’t practical yet, but maintaining good vitamin D status might indirectly influence its levels, though no specific supplementation protocol is provided.
Summary
The study found that higher vitamin D and E levels are linked to fewer allergies, while vitamin A may help fight viruses. The antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 was tied to lower levels of certain immune cells that drive inflammation. However, the research doesn’t give clear ways to boost LL‑37 or specific dosing advice for everyday use.
Abstract
Tonsils have an active role in immune defence and inducing and maintaining tolerance to allergens. Vitamins A, D, and E, and antimicrobial peptide LL-37 may have immunomodulatory effects. We studied how their serum levels were associated with allergy status, intratonsillar/nasopharyngeal virus detection and intratonsillar expression of T cell- and innate immune response-specific cytokines, transcription factors and type I/II/III interferons in patients undergoing tonsillectomy. 110 elective tonsillectomy patients participated. Serum levels of vitamins A, 25(OH)D, and E, LL-37 and allergen-specific IgE as well as nasopharyngeal/intratonsillar respiratory viruses were analyzed. The mRNA expression of IFN-α, IFN-β, IFN-γ, IL-10, IL-13, IL-17, IL-28, IL-29, IL-37, TGF-β, FOXP3, GATA3, RORC2 and Tbet in tonsils were analyzed by quantitative RT-PCR. The median age of the patients was 16 years (range 3-60), 28% of subjects had atopy, and 57% carried ≥1 respiratory virus in nasopharynx. Detection of viruses decreased by age. Higher vitamin A levels showed borderline significance with less viral detection (P = 0.056). Higher 25(OH)D was associated with less allergic rhinitis and atopy (P < 0.05) and higher vitamin E with less self-reported allergy (P < 0.05). In gene expression analyses, 25(OH)D was associated with higher IL-37, vitamin A with higher IFN-γ and vitamin E with less IL-28 (P < 0.05). LL-37 was associated with less FOXP3, RORC2 and IL-17 in tonsils (P < 0.05). Vitamin D and E levels were associated with less allergic disorders. Vitamin A was linked to antiviral and vitamin D with anti-inflammatory activity. LL-37 and was linked to T regulatory cell effects.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-02-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.pone.0172350
39
44