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Vitamin D, the Immune System and the Yearly Outbreaks of
Flu...Is the solution to good to be true?
Vitamin D boosts the immune system and
enhances the body’s ability to kill bacteria or
viruses intercellular invaders that make their way into body
cells.
When a mechanism known as a toll-like
receptor (TLR) recognizes the invaders, it causes direct
anti-germ activity by stimulating the action of peptide
proteins that bind to and kill viruses, bacteria and
fungi.[i] [ii] [iii]
The peptides are called cathelicidins, and
they do their work by breaking down the cell walls of
viruses and bacteria.[iv] The gene that turns on
cathelicidin is a direct target of vitamin D. Therefore, it
is vitamin D that triggers the action of cathelicidins
against all of these “invaders, [v] including the viruses
that cause flu and colds.
It is important to understand that
ultraviolet B light (UVB) is the wave length of sunlight
that, when it contacts the skin, stimulates the skin to
produce vitamin D.
The skin does not produce any vitamin D
unless UVB is available. UVB, plentiful in summer sunshine,
is filtered out in winter at high latitudes because of the
sun’s position in the southern sky (northern sky in the
southern hemisphere).
This is called “vitamin D winter.” Blood
vitamin D levels, therefore, become very low in winter
unless some other method is used to keep them at desirable
levels. So what does all this have to do with flu and colds?
I will post the answer in my next blog.
This year, kiss the flu goodbye!
[i] Zhang, L. et al. Contribution of Human
-Defensin 1, 2, and 3 to the Anti-HIV-1 Activity of CD8
Antiviral Factor. Science 2002;298:995-1,000.
[ii] Wang, T. et al. Cutting edge: 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3
is a direct inducer of antimicrobial peptide gene
expression. J Immunol 2004;173:2909-12.
[iii] Herr, C. et al. The role of cathelicidin and defensins
in pulmonary and inflammatory diseases. Expert Opin Biol
Ther 2007;7:1449-61.
[iv] Liu, P. et al. Toll-like receptor triggering of a
vitamin D-mediated human antimicrobial response. Science
2006;311:1770-73.
[v] Gombart, A. et al. Human cathelicidin antimicrobial
peptide (CAMP) gene is a direct target of the vitamin D
receptor and is up-regulated in myeloid cells by
1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. FASEB J 2005;19:1067-77. |