March 21, 2019
Researcher identifies first case of person without the protein needed to transport vitamin D
Marcadier has found the first case of a person without the protein needed to transport vitamin D.
Kelly Johnston, Cumming School of Medicine
Research identifying the first case of a person living without the protein needed to bind and transport vitamin D in the bloodstream has been published in the . The paper, led by a 91快色 geneticist, and co-authored by researchers at the University of Washington in Seattle, U.S., and University of British Columbia (UBC), opens important new avenues of research into how the body transports and absorbs vitamin D, as well as how it can best be measured.
Vitamin D, a steroid hormone essential to calcium regulation and bone health, is available through a healthy diet or with supplements, and can also be made by the body when exposed to sunlight. Once in the bloodstream, most vitamin D becomes attached to the vitamin D binding protein for storage and transport. But researchers have identified a 59-year-old woman who lacks the binding protein and has no measurable vitamin D in her system 鈥 the first such human case.
鈥淭he idea has always been that without its binding protein, vitamin D couldn鈥檛 get to the cells where it鈥檚 needed. Our findings call that into question,鈥 says Dr. Julien Marcadier, MD, a clinical assistant professor in the departments of medical genetics and paediatrics at the Cumming School of Medicine and senior author of the paper. 鈥淭o our surprise, she鈥檚 maintained normal calcium levels despite having no measurable vitamin D. This tells us that the vitamin D she has in her system does in fact get to its target cells, though how exactly that happens is still unknown.鈥
The woman鈥檚 case puzzled doctors for years. In her early 40s, she started to break a few bones. 鈥淪he had a number of fragility fractures, little falls where the average person wouldn鈥檛 expect to break a bone.鈥 says Marcadier. Doctors found the woman had absolutely no vitamin D in her body, even after giving her massive doses. 鈥淣o matter how much or how often they gave her vitamin D, the levels wouldn鈥檛 budge above zero.鈥
Dr. Patrick Ferreira, MD, now retired after years of service at the Alberta Children鈥檚 Hospital, was the first geneticist brought in to help figure out the puzzle, and immediately suspected there was a problem with the woman鈥檚 vitamin D binding protein. Marcadier then became involved, and was able to collaborate with teams at UBC and the University of Washington to confirm Ferreira鈥檚 theory. The researchers proved that the woman is incapable of making any vitamin D binding protein because she lacks the gene to do so.
This opens up new avenues of research into how vitamin D and its binding protein work in the body, and how best to assess a person鈥檚 vitamin D status. 鈥淏ecause her calcium and phosphate levels have been normal for years, we know that whatever vitamin D she is given can do its job,鈥 says Marcadier. 鈥淚t also adds to some of the current controversy out there about how vitamin D should be measured, and what should be considered a normal level.鈥
Animal research has shown that mice without the vitamin D binding protein can remain healthy, provided they have enough vitamin D in their diet. The same appears to be true for this unique patient.
This is the first reported case of a human without vitamin D binding protein. The woman, who does not wish to be identified, is now taking vitamin D at a dose of 2000 IU per day and has not suffered any recent fractures. She continues to work with her health-care team as they try to better understand the role of vitamin D binding protein.