Nutrients (Mar 2023)

Vitamin D, Cellular Senescence and Chronic Kidney Diseases: What Is Missing in the Equation?

  • Romina P. Martinelli,
  • Sandra Rayego-Mateos,
  • Matilde Alique,
  • Laura Márquez-Expósito,
  • Lucia Tejedor-Santamaria,
  • Alberto Ortiz,
  • Emilio González-Parra,
  • Marta Ruiz-Ortega

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15061349
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. 1349

Abstract

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As life expectancy increases in many countries, the prevalence of age-related diseases also rises. Among these conditions, chronic kidney disease is predicted to become the second cause of death in some countries before the end of the century. An important problem with kidney diseases is the lack of biomarkers to detect early damage or to predict the progression to renal failure. In addition, current treatments only retard kidney disease progression, and better tools are needed. Preclinical research has shown the involvement of the activation of cellular senescence-related mechanisms in natural aging and kidney injury. Intensive research is searching for novel treatments for kidney diseases as well as for anti-aging therapies. In this sense, many experimental shreds of evidence support that treatment with vitamin D or its analogs can exert pleiotropic protective effects in kidney injury. Moreover, vitamin D deficiency has been described in patients with kidney diseases. Here, we review recent evidence about the relationship between vitamin D and kidney diseases, explaining the underlying mechanisms of the effect of vitamin D actions, with particular attention to the modulation of cellular senescence mechanisms.

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