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Enzyme Discovery Sheds Light On Vitamin D
Surprising findings by Queens researchers have shed new light
on how the sunshine vitamin D increasingly used to
treat and prevent cancer and other diseases is broken down by
our bodies.
The effectiveness of vitamin D therapy is partly dependent on how quickly
it will be broken down, says Biochemistry professor Glenville
Jones, an expert in the field of vitamin D
metabolism. By studying the enzyme responsible for breaking down
the vitamin, we hope to develop a way to prevent this from happening
by blocking that response.
First observed in Dr. Joness lab by undergraduate Biochemistry
student Brendan OLeary, the discovery reveals that changing a
single amino acid in the hydroxylase enzyme will cause it to take a
completely different pathway. Although scientists have known for 25
years that the enzyme is capable of taking two different pathways, until
now they could not explain why this occurs.
Earlier study of the enzyme had shown that its pathway pattern
is species specific. Some species, including humans and rats, favour
one pathway, while others most notably the opossum favour
the other pathway.
Using a technique called liquid chromatography mass spectrometry, the
researchers studied cells from animals in both categories. They changed
the human enzyme in certain key places to see if this would affect its
pathway pattern.
Surprisingly, they discovered that altering a single amino acid completely
changes the enzyme from a human pattern to an opossum pattern. This
change can be flicked back and forth like a light switch,
says Dr. Jones, adding: Its remarkable. In biochemistry
you rarely see that kind of predictive work from modeling molecules
and enzymes.
The Queens researchers believe the hydroxylase enzyme plays an
important role in human cell functions.
When vitamin D drugs are used in an attempt
to arrest certain types of cancer, for example, the tumour responds
by making more of this enzyme. If we can block the tumour response,
we should be able to successfully treat some tumours with vitamin D
compounds, says Dr. Jones, whose research is supported by the
Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
Vitamin D deficiency has also been correlated with other diseases,
including multiple sclerosis, muscle weakness, and bone-related disorders,
he notes.
The teams findings are published on-line in the journal Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). Other members include: research
associate David Prosser, PhD student Martin Kaufmann, and research technician
Valarie Byford.
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External links
Medicalnewstoday:Vitamin
D
Algaecal:Vitamin
D
Sciencedaily:Vitamin
D
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