Vitamin D (calciferol) metabolism (Homo sapiens)

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31413212, 9, 12, 16215, 1721117, 18, 2041, 42endoplasmic reticulum lumencytosolSKINKIDNEYendoplasmic reticulum lumenmitochondrial matrixnucleoplasmcytosolcytosolmitochondrial intermembrane spaceTARGET CELLLIVERcytosollysosomal lumenLGMNNADP+H2ONADPHH+GC CDL NADP+NADPHO2CDLCUBN:GC:CDLVD3LRP2CTLGC CUBN H2OCDL CUBN:GC:CDLO2H+H2OVD3CYP2R1GC:CDLCDL NADPHVD3CDL NADP+7-dehydroCHOLCUBN:GC:CDLCholesterolbiosynthesisGCCDLGC H+O2CUBN CYP24A1CUBNCTAGC VD3CDLCDLCYP27B1(?-508)CDL CUBN CUBN CUBN:CDL6, 8, 10, 15, 19


Description

Vitamin D3 (VD3, cholecalciferol) is a steroid hormone that principally plays roles in regulating intestinal calcium absorption and in bone metabolism. It is obtained from the diet and produced in the skin by photolysis of 7-dehydrocholesterol and released into the bloodstream. Only a few food sources have significant amounts of vitamins D2 and D3 but many foodstuffs nowadays are fortified with vitamin D. The metabolites of vitamin D3 are carried in the circulation bound to a plasma protein called vitamin D binding protein (GC) (for review see Delanghe et al. 2015, Chun 2012). VD3 undergoes two subsequent hydroxylations to form the active form of the vitamin, 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D3 (CTL, calcitriol). The first hydroxylation takes place in the liver followed by subsequent transport to the kidney where the second hydroxylation takes place. CTL acts by binding to nuclear vitamin D receptors and regulates over 60 genes involved in calcium homeostasis, immune responses, cellular growth, differentiation and apoptosis. Inactivation of CTL occurs via C23/C24 oxidation catalysed by cytochrome CYP24A1 enzyme (Christakos et al. 2016). View original pathway at:Reactome.

Comments

Reactome-Converter 
Pathway is converted from Reactome ID: 196791
Reactome-version 
Reactome version: 61
Reactome Author 
Reactome Author: Jassal, Bijay

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Bibliography

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History

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CompareRevisionActionTimeUserComment
114746view16:23, 25 January 2021ReactomeTeamReactome version 75
113190view11:25, 2 November 2020ReactomeTeamReactome version 74
112418view15:36, 9 October 2020ReactomeTeamReactome version 73
101322view11:21, 1 November 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 66
100859view20:53, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 65
100400view19:27, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 64
99948view16:11, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 63
99504view14:44, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 62 (2nd attempt)
99150view12:41, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 62
93749view13:33, 16 August 2017ReactomeTeamreactome version 61
93268view11:18, 9 August 2017ReactomeTeamreactome version 61
86977view14:30, 15 July 2016MkutmonOntology Term : 'vitamin D metabolic pathway' added !
86345view09:15, 11 July 2016ReactomeTeamreactome version 56
86215view11:11, 7 July 2016ReactomeTeamNew pathway

External references

DataNodes

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NameTypeDatabase referenceComment
7-dehydroCHOLMetaboliteCHEBI:17759 (ChEBI)
CDL MetaboliteCHEBI:17933 (ChEBI)
CDLMetaboliteCHEBI:17933 (ChEBI)
CTAMetaboliteCHEBI:47828 (ChEBI)
CTLMetaboliteCHEBI:17823 (ChEBI)
CUBN ProteinO60494 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
CUBN:CDLComplexR-HSA-8963847 (Reactome)
CUBN:GC:CDLComplexR-HSA-350085 (Reactome)
CUBN:GC:CDLComplexR-HSA-350092 (Reactome)
CUBN:GC:CDLComplexR-HSA-350115 (Reactome)
CUBNProteinO60494 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
CYP24A1ProteinQ07973 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
CYP27B1(?-508)ProteinO15528 (Uniprot-TrEMBL) The start coordinate is not yet known
CYP2R1ProteinQ6VVX0 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
Cholesterol biosynthesisPathwayR-HSA-191273 (Reactome) Cholesterol is synthesized de novo from acetyl CoA. The overall synthetic process is outlined in the attached illustration. Enzymes whose regulation plays a major role in determining the rate of cholesterol synthesis in the body are highlighted in red, and connections to other metabolic processes are indicated. The transformation of zymosterol into cholesterol can follow either of routes, one in which reduction of the double bond in the isooctyl side chain is the final step (cholesterol synthesis via desmosterol, also known as the Bloch pathway) and one in which this reduction is the first step (cholesterol biosynthesis via lathosterol, also known as the Kandutsch-Russell pathway). The former pathway is prominent in the liver and many other tissues while the latter is prominent in skin, where it may serve as the source of the 7-dehydrocholesterol that is the starting point for the synthesis of D vitamins. Defects in several of the enzymes involved in this process are associated with human disease and have provided useful insights into the regulatory roles of cholesterol and its synthetic intermediates in human development (Gaylor 2002; Herman 2003; Kandutsch & Russell 1960; Mitsche et al. 2015; Song et al. 2005).
GC ProteinP02774 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
GC:CDLComplexR-HSA-209892 (Reactome)
GCProteinP02774 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
H+MetaboliteCHEBI:15378 (ChEBI)
H2OMetaboliteCHEBI:15377 (ChEBI)
LGMNProteinQ99538 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
LRP2ProteinP98164 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
NADP+MetaboliteCHEBI:18009 (ChEBI)
NADPHMetaboliteCHEBI:16474 (ChEBI)
O2MetaboliteCHEBI:15379 (ChEBI)
VD3MetaboliteCHEBI:28940 (ChEBI)

Annotated Interactions

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SourceTargetTypeDatabase referenceComment
7-dehydroCHOLR-HSA-209754 (Reactome)
CDLArrowR-HSA-209766 (Reactome)
CDLArrowR-HSA-209845 (Reactome)
CDLArrowR-HSA-6807242 (Reactome)
CDLR-HSA-209766 (Reactome)
CDLR-HSA-209868 (Reactome)
CDLR-HSA-209944 (Reactome)
CDLR-HSA-6807242 (Reactome)
CTAArrowR-HSA-209765 (Reactome)
CTLArrowR-HSA-209868 (Reactome)
CTLR-HSA-209765 (Reactome)
CUBN:CDLArrowR-HSA-350158 (Reactome)
CUBN:GC:CDLArrowR-HSA-209760 (Reactome)
CUBN:GC:CDLArrowR-HSA-350168 (Reactome)
CUBN:GC:CDLArrowR-HSA-350186 (Reactome)
CUBN:GC:CDLR-HSA-209760 (Reactome)
CUBN:GC:CDLR-HSA-350158 (Reactome)
CUBN:GC:CDLR-HSA-350168 (Reactome)
CUBNR-HSA-350186 (Reactome)
CYP24A1mim-catalysisR-HSA-209765 (Reactome)
CYP27B1(?-508)mim-catalysisR-HSA-209868 (Reactome)
CYP2R1mim-catalysisR-HSA-209845 (Reactome)
GC:CDLArrowR-HSA-209944 (Reactome)
GC:CDLR-HSA-350186 (Reactome)
GCR-HSA-209944 (Reactome)
H+R-HSA-209765 (Reactome)
H+R-HSA-209845 (Reactome)
H+R-HSA-209868 (Reactome)
H2OArrowR-HSA-209765 (Reactome)
H2OArrowR-HSA-209845 (Reactome)
H2OArrowR-HSA-209868 (Reactome)
LGMNmim-catalysisR-HSA-350158 (Reactome)
LRP2mim-catalysisR-HSA-350168 (Reactome)
NADP+ArrowR-HSA-209765 (Reactome)
NADP+ArrowR-HSA-209845 (Reactome)
NADP+ArrowR-HSA-209868 (Reactome)
NADPHR-HSA-209765 (Reactome)
NADPHR-HSA-209845 (Reactome)
NADPHR-HSA-209868 (Reactome)
O2R-HSA-209765 (Reactome)
O2R-HSA-209845 (Reactome)
O2R-HSA-209868 (Reactome)
R-HSA-209754 (Reactome) The skin's exposure to UV rays from sunlight induces the photolytic cleavage of 7-dehydrocholesterol to previtamin D3. This is followed by thermal isomerization to form vitamin D3 (VD3, cholecalciferol) (Holick et al. 1977).
R-HSA-209760 (Reactome) The internalized complex enters the lysosome where it can be acted upon the protease legumain.
R-HSA-209765 (Reactome) Calcitriol (1,25(OH)2-D3) is biologically inactivated through a series of reactions beginning with 24-hydroxylation and is most likely a mechanism of elimination. 24-Hydroxylation of the vitamin D metabolites is largely regulated inversely to 1-hydroxylation, the initial step towards activation.
R-HSA-209766 (Reactome) Once out of the lysosome, calcidiol (CDL) translocates to the mitochondion where it is made available to the mitochondrial membrane-resident protein CYP27B1 for further hydroxylation. The mechanism of mitochondrial targeting is unknown but may involve some kind of intracellular vitamin D binding protein (IDBP). IDBPs are related to the hsc-70 family of heat shock proteins and may function to localise vitamin D metabolites to specific areas. No human IDBP has yet been characterised (Radons 2016).
R-HSA-209845 (Reactome) To be functionally active, vitamin D3 (VD3) needs to be dihydroxylated. The first hydroxylation at position 25 is carried out by ER membrane-located vitamin D 25-hydroxylase (CYP2R1) in the liver, forming calcidiol (CDL) (Shinkyo et al. 2004, Cheng et al. 2003).
R-HSA-209868 (Reactome) The second step in vitamin D3 activation requires hydroxylation of 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (calcidiol, CDL) to 1alpha-25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (calcitriol, CTL). This conversion is mediated by 25-hydroxyvitamin D-1alpha hydroxylase (CYP27B1), an outer mitochondrial membrane-resident protein (Zehnder et al. 2002, Fritsche et al. 2003, Sawada et al. 1999).
R-HSA-209944 (Reactome) Vitamin D binding protein (GC aka DBP), a plasma protein, carries the vitamin D metabolites in the circulation. Calcidiol (CDL) translocates to the extracellular region where it binds with GC and is transported to the kidney (Verboven et al. 2002).
R-HSA-350147 (Reactome) Once vitamin D3 (VD3) is released from vitamin D binding protein (GC, DBP), it translocates from the extracellular region to the ER membrane, becoming available for hydroxylation by the microsomal enzyme CYP2R1 (Shinkyo et al. 2004).
R-HSA-350158 (Reactome) Mammalian legumain (LGMN, asparagine-specific endoprotease) is a subfamily of cysteine proteases with no homology to other known proteases and is found in a wide range of organisms from parasites to plants and animals. LGMN requires acidic conditions for its degradative activity. Cubilin (CUBN), once released from the complex, cycles back to the cell surface. Free calcidiol (CDL) becomes available for further processing (Nykjaer et al. 1999).
R-HSA-350168 (Reactome) Megalin (LRP2, glycoprotein 330) is a member of the low density lipoprotein receptor family and is abundant in kidney proximal tubules (Kounnas et al. 1995, Hjalm et al. 1996). LRP2 mediates the endocytic uptake of GC:CDL complexes, thereby preventing the loss of CDL in urine (Nykjaer et al. 1999, Kaseda et al. 2011).
R-HSA-350186 (Reactome) Cubilin (CUBN) is a membrane-associated protein colocalising with megalin (LRP2). Its function is to sequester steroid carrier complexes such as vitamin D binding protein:calcidiol (GC:CDL) on the cell surface before LRP2 mediates their internalisation (Nykjaer et al. 2001).
R-HSA-6807242 (Reactome) Calcidiol (CDL) translocates to the extracellular region (Verboven et al. 2002).
R-HSA-8963872 (Reactome) Vitamin D metabolites such as VD3 are lipophilic and must be transported in the circulation bound to plasma proteins. VD3 translocates to the extracellular region where it binds GC, a vitamin D binding protein (Verboven et al. 2002).
VD3ArrowR-HSA-209754 (Reactome)
VD3ArrowR-HSA-350147 (Reactome)
VD3ArrowR-HSA-8963872 (Reactome)
VD3R-HSA-209845 (Reactome)
VD3R-HSA-350147 (Reactome)
VD3R-HSA-8963872 (Reactome)
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