TB Research

Association of circulating serum free bioavailable and total vitamin D with cathelicidin levels among active TB patients and household contacts

Ester Lilian Acen, William Worodria, David Patrick Kateete, Ronald Olum, Moses Joloba, Ashraf Akintayo Akintola, Mudarshiru Bbuye, Irene Andia

Research Square · 2022-11

Abstract

Abstract The free hormone hypothesis postulates that the estimation of free circulating 25(OH)D may be a better marker of vitamin D status and is of clinical importance compared to total vitamin D levels because it is the fraction involved in biological activities. Studies have shown that cathelicidin inhibits the growth of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis in a vitamin D-dependent manner and therefore adequate vitamin D is required for its expression. The aim of the study was to determine the association between serum-free and bioavailable and total vitamin D with LL-37 levels in ATB patients, LTBI and individuals with no TB infection. This was a cross sectional study and free and bioavailable vitamin D and LL-37 levels were measured. 95 specimens were further selected to estimate total vitamin D levels. The median free and bioavailable vitamin D levels of study participants were 3.8 ng/mL. The median LL-37 levels were 318.8 ng/mL. The mean total vitamin D levels were 18.9 ng/mL. Significantly weak inverse associations were found and vitamin D is involved in the regulation of LL-37 expression and low vitamin D levels can alter this relationship.

MeSH terms

  • Vitamin D and neurology
  • Cathelicidin
  • Bioavailability
  • Vitamin
  • Vitamin D-binding protein
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Internal medicine
  • Endocrinology
  • Medicine
  • Biology