Vitamin D-binding protein belongs to the
albumin gene family, together with
human serum albumin and
alpha-fetoprotein. It is a multifunctional protein found in plasma,
ascitic fluid,
cerebrospinal fluid and on the surface of many cell types. It is able to bind the various forms of
vitamin D including
ergocalciferol (vitamin D2) and
cholecalciferol (vitamin D3), the 25-hydroxylated forms (
calcifediol), and the active hormonal product, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (
calcitriol). The major proportion of vitamin D in blood is bound to this protein. It transports vitamin D metabolites between skin, liver and kidney, and then on to the various target tissues. Beyond acting as the carrier protein for vitamin D and its metabolites, DBP also transports
free fatty acids, binds to
actin and may help prevent actin polymerization during tissue injury. It also might serve as a macrophage activator, contributing to the inflammatory response by modulating T-cell activity. As
Gc protein-derived macrophage activating factor it is a
Macrophage Activating Factor (MAF) that has been tested for use as a cancer treatment that would activate
macrophages against cancer cells.
Interactive pathway map ==Production==