Effect of cortisone treatment on the active transport of calcium by the small intestine
Open Access
- 1 June 1971
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 50 (6) , 1309-1321
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci106610
Abstract
It is generally recognized that glucocorticoid administration may diminish calcium absorption in vivo as well as the active transport of calcium by the intestine in vitro. Recent studies by others have emphasized the possibility of an alteration in the metabolism of vitamin D to 25-hydroxycholecalciferol in accounting for the steroid effects on calcium absorption. The results obtained in the present studies fail to support this hypothesis. The present studies confirm that the administration of cortisone or other glucocorticoids to the rat interferes with the active transport of calcium by duodenal gut sacs in vitro. This abnormality is not due to an alteration in the permeability of the intestine to calcium, and it cannot be corrected by the administration of either massive doses of vitamin D2 or modest doses of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol. Experiments concerned with the effects of cortisone on the level of the vitamin D-dependent duodenal calcium-binding protein, the amount of bioassayable vitamin D activity in the mucosa, and the distribution and metabolism of 3H-vitamin D3, did not provide evidence in favor of a harmone-related defect in either the localization of vitamin D or its metabolism to 25-hydroxycholecalciferol. Alterations in the transport of iron and D-galactose, not dependent on vitamin D, suggest that cortisone treatment may be responsible for more than a simple antagonism to the effects of vitamin D. The results of the present studies indicate that cortisone administration affects the cellular mechanisms mediating calcium transport in a manner that is opposite to the effects of vitamin D, but seems to be independent of any direct interaction with the parent vitamin or its metabolites. If a disorder in vitamin D metabolism is at all involved, it is at a step subsequent to 25-hydroxylation.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- “Activation” of vitamin D by the liverJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1969
- 25-Hydroxycholecalciferol: Direct Effect on Calcium TransportScience, 1969
- Long Biological Half-life of Vitamin D3 and its Polar Metabolites in Human SerumNature, 1969
- 25-Hydroxycholecalciferol: Stimulation of Bone Resorption in Tissue CultureScience, 1969
- Vitamin D 3 -Induced Calcium-Binding Protein in Chick Intestinal MucosaScience, 1966
- A RAPID METHOD OF TOTAL LIPID EXTRACTION AND PURIFICATIONCanadian Journal of Biochemistry and Physiology, 1959
- METABOLIC STUDIES ON TWO INFANTS WITH IDIOPATHIC HYPERCALCÆMIAThe Lancet, 1956
- Idiopathic Hypercalcaemia of Infancy: Studies of the Mineral BalanceActa Paediatrica, 1955
- EFFECT OF CORTISONE ON CALCIUM METABOLISM IN SARCOIDOSIS WITH HYPERCALCqMIA POSSIBLY ANTAGONISTIC ACTIONS OF CORTISONE AND VITAMIN DThe Lancet, 1954
- Active Transport of Sodium as the Source of Electric Current in the Short‐circuited Isolated Frog Skin.Acta Physiologica Scandinavica, 1951