Vitamin D Promotes Pneumococcal Killing and Modulates Inflammatory Responses in Primary Human Neutrophils.
Subramanian. Karthik K; Bergman. Peter P; Henriques-Normark. Birgitta B
Key Findings
- Vitamin D raises levels of pattern‑recognition receptors (TLR2, NOD2) and antimicrobial peptides (LL‑37, HNP1‑3) in human neutrophils.
- Neutrophils pre‑treated with vitamin D kill pneumococci more effectively, and this effect depends on the vitamin D receptor.
- Vitamin D reduces inflammatory cytokine release from infected neutrophils by inducing IL‑4 and SOCS‑1/3, which dampen NF‑κB signaling.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, a daily vitamin D supplement (e.g., 2000–4000 IU, adjusted to maintain serum 25‑OH D in the 40–60 ng/mL range) may enhance innate immunity against respiratory infections by boosting LL‑37 production. Pairing vitamin D with standard antibiotics could improve bacterial clearance while limiting harmful inflammation. Monitoring vitamin D levels and adjusting dosage is advisable to avoid excess.
Summary
Taking vitamin D can boost your immune cells' ability to kill the pneumonia‑causing bacteria Streptococcus pneumoniae. It does this by increasing the production of antimicrobial peptides like LL‑37 and HNP1‑3, while also calming down excess inflammation.
Abstract
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a major human pathogen and a leading cause of pneumonia, septicemia, and meningitis worldwide. Despite clinical studies linking vitamin D deficiency and pneumonia, molecular mechanisms behind these observations remain unclear. In particular, the effects of vitamin D on neutrophil responses remain unknown. Using pneumococcal strains, primary neutrophils isolated from human blood, and sera from patients with frequent respiratory tract infections (RTIs), we investigated the effects of vitamin D on neutrophil bactericidal and inflammatory responses, including pattern recognition receptors, antimicrobial peptides, and cytokine regulation. We found that vitamin D upregulated pattern recognition receptors, TLR2, and NOD2, and induced the antimicrobial human neutrophil peptides (HNP1-3) and LL-37, resulting in increased killing of pneumococci in a vitamin D receptor-dependent manner. Antibodies targeting HNP1-3 inhibited bacterial killing. Vitamin D supplementation of serum from patients with bacterial RTIs enhanced neutrophil killing. Moreover, vitamin D lowered inflammatory cytokine production by infected neutrophils via IL-4 production and the induction of suppressor of cytokine signaling (SOCS) proteins SOCS-1 and SOCS-3, leading to the suppression of NF-κB signaling. Thus, vitamin D enhances neutrophil killing of S. pneumoniae while dampening excessive inflammatory responses and apoptosis, suggesting that vitamin D could be used alongside antibiotics when treating pneumococcal infections.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-02-28T00:00:00.000Z
10.1159/000455969
75
40