A novel vitamin D3 analogue, [2 beta-(3-hydroxypropoxy)-calcitriol: ED-71] showed a similar Ca-regulating activity as calcitriol in the in vivo and in vitro Ca mobilization test and ex vivo intestinal Ca absorption assay using vitamin D-deficient rats. The differentiation-inducing activity of ED-71 in mouse myeloid leukemia cell line (WEHI-3 cell) was slightly less than that of calcitriol. ED-71 distributes predominantly in plasma as an intact form and its half-life plasma was twice as long as that of calcitriol. Further study revealed that the higher binding potency of ED-71 to plasma-specific vitamin D-binding protein (DBP) compared with that of calcitriol accounts for its stability in the blood circulation. The pharmacological effect of ED-71 for the animal models with osteoporosis seemed to be better than that calcitriol. These results suggest that ED-71 should become a valuable therapeutic long-acting drug for patients with osteoporosis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000420166 | DOI Listing |
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