Vitamin D and the immune system

C Aranow - Journal of investigative medicine, 2011 - journals.sagepub.com
C Aranow
Journal of investigative medicine, 2011journals.sagepub.com
It is now clear that vitamin D has important roles in addition to its classic effects on calcium
and bone homeostasis. As the vitamin D receptor is expressed on immune cells (B cells, T
cells, and antigen-presenting cells), and these immunologic cells are all capable of
synthesizing the active vitamin D metabolite, vitamin D has the capability of acting in an
autocrine manner in a local immunologic milieu. Vitamin D can modulate the innate and
adaptive immune responses. Deficiency in vitamin D is associated with increased …
It is now clear that vitamin D has important roles in addition to its classic effects on calcium and bone homeostasis. As the vitamin D receptor is expressed on immune cells (B cells, T cells, and antigen-presenting cells), and these immunologic cells are all capable of synthesizing the active vitamin D metabolite, vitamin D has the capability of acting in an autocrine manner in a local immunologic milieu. Vitamin D can modulate the innate and adaptive immune responses. Deficiency in vitamin D is associated with increased autoimmunity and an increased susceptibility to infection. As immune cells in autoimmune diseases are responsive to the ameliorative effects of vitamin D, the beneficial effects of supplementing vitamin D-deficient individuals with autoimmune disease may extend beyond the effects on bone and calcium homeostasis.
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