Scientific News Health care Medicinal preparations NOVEL FORM OF VITAMIN D SHOWN TO GROW BONE
NOVEL FORM OF VITAMIN D SHOWN TO GROW BONE
A novel form of vitamin D has been shown to grow bone in the lab and in
experimental animals, a result that holds promise for the estimated 44 million
Americans, mostly post-menopausal women, who suffer from or are at risk for the
bone-wasting disease osteoporosis.
The research, conducted by a team of scientists led by biochemist Hector F.
DeLuca at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison, was reported this
week (Sept. 30) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a
leading scientific journal.
"We've got a compound that is very selective for
bone," says DeLuca.
"It is very effective in animals," increasing bone density
significantly in rats with a condition that mimics human osteoporosis, and can
be used in the lab to grow bone in culture.
The research, conducted by DeLuca, Nirupama K.
Shevde, Lori A. Plum, Margaret Claggett-Dame, Hironori Yamamoto and J. Wesley
Pike, describes the effects of a
potent Vitamin D analog known in scientific shorthand as 2MD. Its synthesis by
the Wisconsin group, and studies of its effects in the lab and in animals,
suggests the potential for developing a class of drugs that could effectively
reverse bone loss in humans suffering from osteoporosis, a disease characterized
by diminished bone density and, ultimately, brittle, fracture-prone bones.
"From where I sit, this is the most promising vitamin D compound I've
seen," says DeLuca, an international authority on vitamin D and its
chemistry.
But he stressed that while the new compound posts astonishing results when
used in experimental animals, it has yet to be tested in humans and it will
likely be several years at best before a drug reaches the market.
"There's nothing like it on the market now. We think it could become a
major actor, but we haven't done any experiments in people," he says.
The compound could become an important alternative to hormone replacement
therapy, one of whose benefits was prevention of bone loss in post-menopausal
women. Because of new evidence of an increased risk of cancer, hormone
replacement therapy has recently been called into question.
The vitamin D analog developed by the Wisconsin team was tested in rats that
had their ovaries removed to mimic menopause and the bone wasting associated
with osteoporosis. Rats given the new vitamin D analog exhibited a 9 percent
increase in total body bone mass. Importantly, vertebrae in the treated rats
exhibited a 25 percent increase in bone mass. Frequently, osteoporosis patients
exhibit a stooped posture as the bones in the spinal column tend to be among the
most affected by osteoporosis.
The compound also added bone mass to the long bones in the limbs of animals
used in the study.
According to DeLuca, the 2MD compound is also the first vitamin D analog
shown to increase bone mass, and that exhibits no apparent toxicity or side
effects.
2MD acts at very low concentrations and appears to work by promoting the
growth of osteoblasts, the cells responsible for making bone. Another form of
vitamin D is now used to treat osteoporosis, but its bone-building action is
limited.
"Our results suggest that 2MD exhibits at very low concentrations a
marked and unexpected activity in stimulating the synthesis of new bone,"
the Wisconsin team wrote in their PNAS report. "This activity is at best
only weakly observed with (the other active form of vitamin D) and then only at
very high concentrations."
It is possible, the authors suggest, that 2MD possesses a "unique
capacity to induce genes capable of orchestrating the process leading to the
formation of bone nodules."
###
-- Terry Devitt (608) 262-8282, trdevitt@facstaff.wisc.edu;
Emily Carlson (608) 262-9772, emilycarlson@facstaff
NOTE TO PHOTO EDITORS: To download a high-resolution head shot of De
Luca, visit: http://www.news.wisc.edu/newsphotos/deluca.html
Contact: Hector F. DeLuca, deluca@biochem.wisc.edu,
608-262-3026, University
of Wisconsin-Madison
Source of the given news and the copyrights belong to a
University
of Wisconsin-Madison
Publishing date: October 8, 2002
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