Synthetic Chemical Probes That Dissect Vitamin D Activities.
Akiko NagataYusuke AkagiLisa AsanoKenjiro KotakeFumihiro KawagoeAileen MendozaShadi Sedghi MasoudKosuke UsudaKoji YasuiYasushi TakemotoAtsushi KittakaKazuo NagasawaMotonari UesugiPublished in: ACS chemical biology (2019)
Vitamin D3 metabolites are capable of controlling gene expression in mammalian cells through two independent pathways: vitamin D receptor (VDR) and sterol regulatory element-binding protein (SREBP) pathways. In the present study, we dissect the complex biological activity of vitamin D by designing synthetic vitamin D3 analogs specific for VDR or SREBP pathway, i.e., a VDR activator that lacks SREBP inhibitory activity, or an SREBP inhibitor devoid of VDR activity. These synthetic vitamin D probes permitted identification of one of the vitamin D-responsive genes, Soat1, as an SREBP-suppressed gene. The chemical probes developed in the present study may prove useful in dissecting the intricate interplay of vitamin D actions, thereby providing insights into how vitamin D target genes are regulated.