Vitamin D-3 produces biologic responses as a consequence of its metabolism into 1 alpha ,25(OH)(2)-vitamin D-3 [1 alpha ,25(OH)(2)D-3] and 24R,25(OH)(2)-vitamin D-3. The metabolic production of these two seco steroids and their generation of the plethora of biologic actions that are attributable to the parent vitamin D-3 are orchestrated via the integrated operation of the vitamin D endocrine system. This system is very similar in its organization to that of classic endocrine systems and is characterized by an endocrine gland (the kidney, the source of the two steroid hormones), target cells which possess receptors for the steroid hormones, and a feed-back loop involving changes in serum Ca2+ that alter the secretion of parathyroid hormone (a stimulator of the renal 1-hydroxylase) which modulates the output by the kidney of the steroid hormones. There are, however, at least two unique aspects to the vitamin D endocrine system. (a) The chemical structures of vitamin D and its steroid hormones dictate that these be highly conformationally flexible molecules present a wide variety of shapes to their biologic environments. (b) It is now believed that 1 alpha ,25(OH)(2)D-3 produces biologic responses through two distinct receptors which recognize totally different shapes of the conformationally flexible 1 alpha ,25(OH)(2)D-3. Thus, the classic actions of 1 alpha ,25(OH)(2)D-3 to regulate gene transcription occur as a consequence of the stereospecific interaction of a modified 6-s-trans bowl-shape of 1 alpha ,25(OH)(2)D-3 with its nuclear receptor (VDRnuc). The ability of 1 alpha ,25(OH)(2)D-3 to generate a variety of rapid (seconds to minutes) biologic responses (opening of chloride channels, activation of PKC and MAP kinases) requires a planar 6-s-cis ligand shape which is recognized by a putative plasma membrane receptor (VDRmem) to initiate appropriate signal transduction pathways. This report summarizes the evidence for the specificity of different ligand shapes and the operation of the two receptor families for 1 alpha ,25(OH)(2)D-3. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.