By Improving This Enzyme Your Osteoporosis Risks Reduces Dramatically

Updated: October 17, 2022

Lara Cover Photo

Lara Pizzorno is the author of “Your Bones: How You Can Prevent Osteoporosis and Have Strong Bones for Life – Naturally” and a member of the American Medical Writers Association with 29 years of experience specializing in bone health.

Recently we asked Lara if she would help us provide a series of short, ongoing videos to help you (our customers and readers) stay up to date on the latest facts and science related to bone health.

In this latest video, Lara reveals that certain people have a slower working version of this enzyme, which in turn increases their fracture risk. But she discusses how you can improve this enzyme’s function.  Watch the video below (or read the transcript provided) and let us know what you think in the comments. 🙂

Transcript:

Hello, my name is Lara Pizzorno. I’m the author of “Your Bones” and I’m here to share some information with you that I hope will help you to have healthier bones.

In this video I’d like to talk with you about:

  • An enzyme called gamma-glutamyl carboxylase which plays a critical role in our bones’ health.
  • And why some of us have a slow version of this enzyme which greatly increases our risk for osteoporosis.
  • And then, what we can do to improve the way that this enzyme functions so that we too can have healthier bones if we do have a slow version of gamma-glutamyl carboxylase.

So what is gamma-glutamyl carboxylase?

It’s the enzyme that activates the two key proteins that regulate where calcium goes in your body: osteocalcin which puts calcium into your bones and matrix gla protein which keeps it out of your arteries. Vitamin K is the cofactor for this enzyme, gamma-glutamyl carboxylase. You can kind of think of Vitamin K as the sparkplug for this enzyme.

Without Vitamin K around, gamma-glutamyl carboxylase can’t work, and we really need it to be working. Because it is the enzyme that when Vitamin K1 joins with it to serve as its cofactor, activates our blood clotting proteins. And when Vitamin K2 joins with it to serve as its cofactor, activates those proteins that are so important to bone health that I keep telling you about. Osteocalcin which puts calcium into our bones and matrix gla protein which prevents calcium from depositing where we don’t want it, in our arteries, brains, breasts, or kidneys.

Some of us have inherited a SNP or a single-nucleotide polymorphism, which is a variation in the way our genes are organized that results in our version of gamma-glutamyl carboxylase being slow.

So we need to help it work better, or we’re not going to do a very good job with activating osteocalcin or matrix gla protein. And the really good news here is that we can improve the efficiency of gamma-glutamyl carboxylase if it’s not working well.

To do so, we just have to make sure that this enzyme is fully saturated with Vitamin K. And to ensure that, we need to make more Vitamin K available to activate this enzyme than the average person needs to maximize his or her gamma-glutamyl carboxylase activity. Again, it’s not yet easy to check your genetic profile for SNPs in the gamma-glutamyl carboxylase enzyme, but this analysis will become available soon and for now, there is something you can do. You can check your blood levels of uncarboxylated osteocalcin.

And remember, osteocalcin is the Vitamin K-dependent protein that when activated by Vitamin K, helps you put calcium into your bones. If it’s not activated by Vitamin K, it just floats around in your bloodstream and it does nothing to put calcium into your bones. So when it’s not been activated by Vitamin K, it’s called uncarboxylated or unactivated, uncarboxylated osteocalcin. So if your blood levels are of uncarboxylated osteocalcin are high, this suggests that you need more Vitamin K to get the job done.

I’ve provided a link to one of the labs that runs this test for uncarboxylated osteocalcin along with this video, and I hope it’s been helpful for you. And I hope you’ll tune in for the next one. We’re going to talk about one more enzyme that’s critical for your bone health and for Vitamin K use and elimination. It’s called cytochrome P450 4F2. And I’ll tell you all about it in the next video. Thanks so much for tuning in.


Sources:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme_kinetics#Michaelis.E2.80.93Menten_kinetics

Haraikawa M, Tsugawa N, Sogabe N, et al.  Effects of gamma-glutamyl carboxylase gene polymorphism (R325Q) on the association between dietary vitamin K intake and gamma-carboxylation of osteocalcin in young adults. Asia Pac J Clin Nutr. 2013;22(4):646-54. doi: 10.6133/apjcn.2013.22.4.01. PMID: 24231026

Sogabe N, Tsugawa N, Maruyama R, et al. Nutritional effects of gamma-glutamyl carboxylase gene polymorphism on the correlation between the vitamin K status and gamma-carboxylation of osteocalcin in young males. J Nutr Sci Vitaminol (Tokyo). 2007 Oct;53(5):419-25. PMID: 18079608

Article Comments

Add New Comment

Your email address will not be published.

  1. Karl Buchanan

    November 8, 2019 , 9:57 pm

    I want to see this help osteogenesis imperfecta keep bone health up

  2. Megan AlgaeCal

    November 12, 2019 , 1:47 pm

    Hi Karl, thanks for taking the time to comment!

    Given the high rates of bone turnover seen in osteogenesis imperfecta – in combination with poor bone mineralization – Strontium Boost’s dual anabolic and anti-resorptive action on bone (coupled with the minerals and vitamins provided by AlgaeCal Plus) may be beneficial for this condition. That said, AlgaeCal has not been studied in specific relation to osteogenesis imperfecta.

    We have a printable information sheet summarizing our products & the human clinical studies if you would like to share it with your doctor here. Feel free to call our Bone Health Consultants at 1-800-820-0184 if you have any questions!

    -Megan @ AlgaeCal

This article features advice from our industry experts to give you the best possible info through cutting-edge research.

Lara Pizzorno
MDiv, MA, LMT - Best-selling author of Healthy Bones Healthy You! and Your Bones; Editor of Longevity Medicine Review, and Senior Medical Editor for Integrative Medicine Advisors.,
Dr. Liz Lipski
PhD, CNS, FACN, IFMP, BCHN, LDN - Professor and Director of Academic Development, Nutrition programs in Clinical Nutrition at Maryland University of Integrative Health.,
Dr. Loren Fishman
MD, B.Phil.,(oxon.) - Medical Director of Manhattan Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation and Founder of the Yoga Injury Prevention Website.,
Prof. Didier Hans
PHD, MBA - Head of Research & Development Center of Bone Diseases, Lausanne University Hospital CHUV, Switzerland,