The Problem of Vitamin D Scarcity: Cultural and Genetic Solutions by Indigenous Arctic and Tropical Peoples

Nutrients. 2022 Sep 30;14(19):4071. doi: 10.3390/nu14194071.

Abstract

Vitamin D metabolism differs among human populations because our species has adapted to different natural and cultural environments. Two environments are particularly difficult for the production of vitamin D by the skin: the Arctic, where the skin receives little solar UVB over the year; and the Tropics, where the skin is highly melanized and blocks UVB. In both cases, natural selection has favored the survival of those individuals who use vitamin D more efficiently or have some kind of workaround that ensures sufficient uptake of calcium and other essential minerals from food passing through the intestines. Vitamin D scarcity has either cultural or genetic solutions. Cultural solutions include consumption of meat in a raw or boiled state and extended breastfeeding of children. Genetic solutions include higher uptake of calcium from the intestines, higher rate of conversion of vitamin D to its most active form, stronger binding of vitamin D to carrier proteins in the bloodstream, and greater use of alternative metabolic pathways for calcium uptake. Because their bodies use vitamin D more sparingly, indigenous Arctic and Tropical peoples can be misdiagnosed with vitamin D deficiency and wrongly prescribed dietary supplements that may push their vitamin D level over the threshold of toxicity.

Keywords: Arctic; Inuit; Samoyed; Sámi; Tropics; UVB; culture; genetics; vitamin D.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Calcium
  • Calcium, Dietary
  • Carrier Proteins
  • Diet
  • Humans
  • Inuit
  • Vitamin D Deficiency*
  • Vitamin D*
  • Vitamins

Substances

  • Calcium, Dietary
  • Carrier Proteins
  • Vitamins
  • Vitamin D
  • Calcium

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.