Back to Search Start Over

Vitamin D Enhances Immune Effector Pathways of NK Cells Thus Providing a Mechanistic Explanation for the Increased Effectiveness of Therapeutic Monoclonal Antibodies.

Authors :
Christofyllakis K
Neumann F
Bewarder M
Thurner L
Kaddu-Mulindwa D
Kos IA
Lesan V
Bittenbring JT
Source :
Nutrients [Nutrients] 2023 Aug 08; Vol. 15 (16). Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Aug 08.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Patients with diffuse large cell lymphoma who have an adequate vitamin D supply derive significantly more benefit from immuno-chemotherapy with rituximab than patients with vitamin D deficiency; this is especially true for female patients. We have already been able to show that vitamin D increases the antibody-dependent cytotoxicity (ADCC) of NK cells in a sex-dependent manner, but it is unclear how vitamin D makes NK cells more efficient.<br />Methods: Healthy individuals with vitamin D deficiency were supplemented with vitamin D to sufficient levels. NK cells were isolated from blood samples before and after vitamin D saturation. For transcriptome analysis, we used the Affymetrix Gene-Chip 2.0™. Gene expression analysis as well as supervised and unsupervised pathway analysis were performed.<br />Results: Among others the "NK cell-associated cytotoxicity pathway" increased after vitamin D substitution. Five IFN-α subtypes (2, 4, 6, 7 and 10) and IFN-κ were more highly expressed and are mainly responsible in these pathways. In contrast, the pathway "interferon-gamma response", as well as other sets in cytokine production and chemotaxis showed a reduction. Toll-like receptor genes (TLR-8, TLR-7, TLR-2) were downregulated and, therefore, are responsible for the decline of these pathways. The same could be shown for the "ubiquitin-ligase" pathway.<br />Conclusions: Increased expression of several IFN-α subtypes may explain the increased ADCC of NK cells in vitamin D-replenished and otherwise healthy subjects. Other regulators of interferon production and ADCC are compensatory upregulated in compensation, such as Toll-like receptors and those of the ubiquitin ligase, and normalize after vitamin D substitution.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2072-6643
Volume :
15
Issue :
16
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nutrients
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37630689
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15163498