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    J Lipid Res. 1976 Sep;17(5):485-90.

    Studies on the transport of vitamin D and of 25-hydroxyvitamin D in human plasma.

    Abstract

    A study was conducted to investigate whether human plasma contains one or more than one protein for the transport of vitamin D and of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OH-D). Serum was labeled in vivo with a mixture of radioactive vitamin D3 (derived from orally administered tracer vitamin D3) and of endogenously synthesized labeled 25-OH-D3. Samples of such serum were subjected to several different protein fractionation procedures. Only a single peak of protein-bound radioactivity was observed after each of these procedures. The fraction comprising the ascending and the descending limbs of the single peak of protein-bound radioactivity (after each procedure) were separately pooled. In each instance the ratio of radioactive 25-OH-D3 to radioactive vitamin D3 was found to be almost identical in both the ascending and the descending limbs. Taken together, these findings provide strong evidence that human serum contains only a single binding protein responsible for the normal transport of both vitamin D and 25-OH-D. Plasma labeled in vitro with added 3H-labeled 25-OH-D3 was subjected to gel filtration on Sephadex G-200 and to chromatography on columns of DEAE-cellulose and of SP-Sephadex. After each of these procedures a single peak of protein-bound radioactivity was observed, with elution profiles of protein and of radioactivity that were identical with those observed with in vivo labeled serum. These data indicate that tracer 25-OH-D3 added to plasma in vitro binds to the same plasma protein normally responsible for the transport of vitamin D and of 25-OH-D.

    PMID:
    184223
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    Free full text

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