Bhoora, SachinPunchoo, Rivak2021-05-142021-05-142020-12Bhoora, S.; Punchoo, R. Policing Cancer: Vitamin D Arrests the Cell Cycle. International Journal of Molecular Sciences 2020, 21, 9296. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21239296.1661-6596 (print)1422-0067 (online)10.3390/ijms21239296http://hdl.handle.net/2263/79916Vitamin D is a steroid hormone crucial for bone mineral metabolism. In addition, vitamin D has pleiotropic actions in the body, including anti-cancer actions. These anti-cancer properties observed within in vitro studies frequently report the reduction of cell proliferation by interruption of the cell cycle by the direct alteration of cell cycle regulators which induce cell cycle arrest. The most recurrent reported mode of cell cycle arrest by vitamin D is at the G1/G0 phase of the cell cycle. This arrest is mediated by p21 and p27 upregulation, which results in suppression of cyclin D and E activity which leads to G1/G0 arrest. In addition, vitamin D treatments within in vitro cell lines have observed a reduced C-MYC expression and increased retinoblastoma protein levels that also result in G1/G0 arrest. In contrast, G2/M arrest is reported rarely within in vitro studies, and the mechanisms of this arrest are poorly described. Although the relationship of epigenetics on vitamin D metabolism is acknowledged, studies exploring a direct relationship to cell cycle perturbation is limited. In this review, we examine in vitro evidence of vitamin D and vitamin D metabolites directly influencing cell cycle regulators and inducing cell cycle arrest in cancer cell lines.en© 2020 by the authors. Licensee: MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.Cell proliferationCell cycleCyclin-dependent kinaseCyclin-dependent kinase inhibitorVitamin DCalcitriolAnti-proliferationCancerHealth sciences articles SDG-03SDG-03: Good health and well-beingPolicing cancer : vitamin D arrests the cell cycleArticle