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The effect of parathyroid hormone on the uptake and retention of 25-hydroxyvitamin D in skeletal muscle cells

Authors :
Abboud, M
Rybchyn, MS
Liu, J
Ning, Y
Gordon-Thomson, C
Brennan-Speranza, TC
Cole, L
Greenfield, H
Fraser, DR
Mason, RS
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD, 2017.

Abstract

Data from our studies, and those of others, support the proposal that there is a role for skeletal muscle in the maintenance of vitamin D status. We demonstrated that skeletal muscle is able to internalise extracellular vitamin D binding protein, which then binds to actin in the cytoplasm, to provide high affinity binding sites which accumulate 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (25(OH)D3) [1]. This study investigated the concentration- and time-dependent effects of parathyroid hormone (PTH) on the capacity of muscle cells to take up and release 3H-25(OH)D3. Uptake and retention studies for 3H-25(OH)D3 were carried out with C2C12 cells differentiated into myotubes and with primary mouse muscle fibers as described [1]. The presence of PTH receptors on mouse muscle fibers was demonstrated by immunohistochemistry and PTH receptors were detected in differentiated myotubes, but not myoblasts, and on muscle fibers by Western blot. Addition of low concentrations of vitamin D binding protein to the incubation media did not alter uptake of 25(OH)D3. Pre-incubation of C2 myotubes or primary mouse muscle fibers with PTH (0.1 to 100 pM) for 3h resulted in a concentration-dependent decrease in 25(OH)D3 uptake after 4 or 16h. These effects were significant at 0.1 or 1pM PTH (p

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od.......363..185e19c288a7fe4f5374820c7f7bf720