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Biochemistry Commons

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Theses/Dissertations

University of Wisconsin Milwaukee

Calcitroic acid

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Full-Text Articles in Biochemistry

Part I: An Investigation Of Calcitroic Acid And Its Phase Ii Conjugates. Part Ii: Toward The Development Of A Novel Orally-Available Asthma Treatment Targeting Gabaa Receptors In The Lungs, Olivia B. Yu May 2019

Part I: An Investigation Of Calcitroic Acid And Its Phase Ii Conjugates. Part Ii: Toward The Development Of A Novel Orally-Available Asthma Treatment Targeting Gabaa Receptors In The Lungs, Olivia B. Yu

Theses and Dissertations

PART I

Calcitroic acid (CTA) was isolated and characterized more than four decades ago.5 Radiolabeled calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) was used at that time to enable the identification of radioactive CTA formed in vivo, which was subsequently extracted and characterized by derivatization.7 CTA was found to be predominantly formed in the liver and secreted into the gut through the bile duct via enterohepatic circulation, leading to fairly high concentrations of this metabolite of vitamin D in the intestine.8 However, assuming it was only a catabolic product of calcitriol, it was ignored thereafter.

Recently, novel experiments showed that CTA can bind the …


Part I: An Investigation Of Calcitroic Acid And Its Phase Ii Conjugates. Part Ii: Toward The Development Of A Novel Orally-Available Asthma Treatment Targeting Gabaa Receptors In The Lungs, Olivia B. Yu May 2019

Part I: An Investigation Of Calcitroic Acid And Its Phase Ii Conjugates. Part Ii: Toward The Development Of A Novel Orally-Available Asthma Treatment Targeting Gabaa Receptors In The Lungs, Olivia B. Yu

Theses and Dissertations

PART I

Calcitroic acid (CTA) was isolated and characterized more than four decades ago.5 Radiolabeled calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) was used at that time to enable the identification of radioactive CTA formed in vivo, which was subsequently extracted and characterized by derivatization.7 CTA was found to be predominantly formed in the liver and secreted into the gut through the bile duct via enterohepatic circulation, leading to fairly high concentrations of this metabolite of vitamin D in the intestine.8 However, assuming it was only a catabolic product of calcitriol, it was ignored thereafter.

Recently, novel experiments showed that CTA can bind the …