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Vitamin D: An innate antiviral agent suppressing hepatitis C virus in human hepatocytes

โœ Scribed by Meital Gal-Tanamy; Larisa Bachmetov; Amiram Ravid; Ruth Koren; Arie Erman; Ran Tur-Kaspa; Romy Zemel


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
704 KB
Volume
54
Category
Article
ISSN
0270-9139

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โœฆ Synopsis


Vitamin D supplementation was reported to improve the probability of achieving a sustained virological response when combined with antiviral treatment against hepatitis C virus (HCV). Our aim was to determine the in vitro potential of vitamin D to inhibit HCV infectious virus production and explore the mechanism(s) of inhibition. Here we show that vitamin D(3) remarkably inhibits HCV production in Huh7.5 hepatoma cells. These cells express CYP27B1, the gene encoding for the enzyme responsible for the synthesis of the vitamin D hormonally active metabolite, calcitriol. Treatment with vitamin D(3) resulted in calcitriol production and induction of calcitriol target gene CYP24A1, indicating that these cells contain the full machinery for vitamin D metabolism and activity. Notably, treatment with calcitriol resulted in HCV inhibition. Collectively, these findings suggest that vitamin D(3) has an antiviral activity which is mediated by its active metabolite. This antiviral activity involves the induction of the interferon signaling pathway, resulting in expression of interferon-ฮฒ and the interferon-stimulated gene, MxA. Intriguingly, HCV infection increased calcitriol production by inhibiting CYP24A1 induction, the enzyme responsible for the first step in calcitriol catabolism. Importantly, the combination of vitamin D(3) or calcitriol and interferon-ฮฑ synergistically inhibited viral production.

Conclusion:

This study demonstrates for the first time a direct antiviral effect of vitamin d in an in vitro infectious virus production system. it proposes an interplay between the hepatic vitamin d endocrine system and hcv, suggesting that vitamin d has a role as a natural antiviral mediator. importantly, our study implies that vitamin d might have an interferon-sparing effect, thus improving antiviral treatment of hcv-infected patients.


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