TB Research

Reduced vitamin D-induced cathelicidin production and killing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in macrophages from a patient with a non-functional vitamin D receptor: A case report

Fatima A. H. Al-Jaberi, C. Crone, Thomas Lindenstrøm, Nicolai Skovbjerg Arildsen, Emilia Sæderup Lindeløv, Louise Aagaard, Eva Gravesen, Rasmus Mortensen, et al. (15 authors)

Frontiers in Immunology · 2022-11

Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) presents a serious health problem with approximately a quarter of the world’s population infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis ( M. tuberculosis ) in an asymptomatic latent state of which 5–10% develops active TB at some point in their lives. The antimicrobial protein cathelicidin has broad antimicrobial activity towards viruses and bacteria including M. tuberculosis . Vitamin D increases the expression of cathelicidin in many cell types including macrophages, and it has been suggested that the vitamin D-mediated antimicrobial activity against M. tuberculosis is dependent on the induction of cathelicidin. However, unraveling the immunoregulatory effects of vitamin D in humans is hampered by the lack of suitable experimental models. We have previously described a family in which members suffer from hereditary vitamin D-resistant rickets (HVDRR). The family carry a mutation in the DNA-binding domain of the vitamin D receptor (VDR). This mutation leads to a non-functional VDR, meaning that vitamin D cannot exert its effect in family members homozygous for the mutation. Studies of HVDRR patients open unique possibilities to gain insight in the immunoregulatory roles of vitamin D in humans. Here we describe the impaired ability of macrophages to produce cathelicidin in a HVDRR patient, who in her adolescence suffered from extrapulmonary TB. The present case is a rare experiment of nature, which illustrates the importance of vitamin D in the pathophysiology of combating M. tuberculosis .

MeSH terms

  • Cathelicidin
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Calcitriol receptor
  • Vitamin D and neurology
  • Medicine
  • Vitamin
  • Tuberculosis
  • Immunology
  • Macrophage
  • Receptor
  • Microbiology
  • Chemistry