About the Project
It is well known that the secosteroid hormone called vitamin D is essential for musculoskeletal health, but it is now apparent that many cells have receptors for vitamin D and its metabolites, and the vitamin has been associated with a range of other health benefits, leading to widespread calls for the vitamin D status of the population to be improved. Since modern diets generally contain little vitamin D the main source is exposure to sunlight, when UV radiation acts on the precursor 7-dehydrocholesterol (7DHC) in skin cells. The levels of precursor vitamin D are understood to decline with age, but it is not clear whether vitamin D synthesis in aged skin is 7DHC limited, or whether it is lack of sun exposure that leads to concern over low vitamin D status in the older population. Understanding the limits to vitamin D synthesis in an aging population will enable targeted advice on maintaining an adequate status at a life stage when retaining a strong musculoskeletal system is vital, as are the other benefits associated with vitamin D.
The aim of the project is to identify, at a cellular level, the age-related ability to synthesise vitamin D in the skin on exposure to sunlight, through availability of the precursor 7-dehydrocholesterol (7DHC) and its UV-conversion. The project will involve a comparative study involving human volunteers in 2 age groups, young and aged adults. Skin (precursor 7DHC) and blood (vitamin D and 25-hydroxyvitamin D, the measure of vitamin D status) will be taken before and after controlled doses of simulated sunlight. Tandem mass spectrometry is the technique to be used for analysing all samples and the extraction procedures to prepare samples from tissue will be refined during the project to enable increased sensitivity from the analysis for the small skin biopsy samples.
The results will be set in context against previous and on-going studies that have assessed the year-round vitamin D status in several population groups of different ages. It will identify whether vitamin D synthesis in the skin of the elderly is 7DHC limited, in which case alternative interventions must be considered in achieving all the health benefits of a good vitamin D status, or whether small changes in lifestyle might lead to such improvements through exposure to UV radiation, as assessed in our previous work based on a detailed UK climatology.
https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/persons/lesley-rhodes(ee30394a-4994-42a9-98ba-92c29f730311).html
Funding Notes
This project is to be funded under the BBSRC Doctoral Training Programme. If you are interested in this project, please make direct contact with the Principal Supervisor to arrange to discuss the project further as soon as possible. You MUST also submit an online application form, full details on how to apply can be found on the BBSRC DTP website http://www.dtpstudentships.manchester.ac.uk/
Applications are invited from UK/EU nationals only. Applicants must have obtained, or be about to obtain, at least an upper second class honours degree (or equivalent) in a relevant subject.
References
Macdonald, H. M., Wood, A. D., Fraser, W. D., Simpson, W. G. (2014) Vitamin D status and ill health. The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology 2; e8-e9
Dancer, R. C. A., Parekh, D., Lax, S., D'Souza, V., Zheng, S., Bassford, C. R., Park, D., Bartis, D. G., Mahida, R., Turner, A. M., Sapey, E., Wei, W., Naidu, B., Stewart, P. M., Fraser, W. D., Christopher, K. B., Cooper, M. S., Gao, F., Sansom, D. M., Martineau, A. R., Perkins, G. D., Thickett, D. R. (2015) Vitamin D deficiency contributes directly to the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) Thorax 70; 617-24
Cashman, K, Kazantzidis, A, Webb AR and Keily M (2015) An integrated predictive model of population serum 25-hydroxycholecalciferol for application in strategy development for vitamin D deficiency prevention. The Journal of Nutrition 145:10, 2419-25