Cholecalciferol (
vitamin D3) is one of the five forms of
vitamin D. It is a
secosteroid, that is, a steroid molecule with one ring open. This and all forms of vitamin D are misnamed:
vitamins by definition are essential organic compounds which cannot be synthesized by the body and must be ingested; cholecalciferol
is synthesized by the body, and functions as a
prehormone. Cholecalciferol is inactive: it is converted to its active form by two hydroxylations: the first in the liver, the second in the kidney, to form
calcitriol, whose action is mediated by the
vitamin D receptor, a
nuclear receptor which regulates the synthesis of hundreds of enzymes and is present in virtually every cell in the body.