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A Protein-Truncating HSD17B13 Variant and Protection from Chronic Liver Disease

Authors :
Shane McCarthy
Jonathan C. Cohen
Frederick E. Dewey
Claudia Schurmann
Matthew D. Still
Panayiotis Stevis
Xin Chu
Daniel J. Rader
David J. Carey
Alan R. Shuldiner
Noura S. Abul-Husn
Semanti Mukherjee
Jonathan S. Packer
Xiping Cheng
Ann Stepanchick
Brian Zambrowicz
Helen H. Hobbs
John Penn
Uyenlinh L. Mirshahi
Scott M. Damrauer
Ingrid B. Borecki
Yurong Xin
G. Craig Wood
Jesper Gromada
Suganthi Balasubramanian
Tanya M. Teslovich
Andrew J. Murphy
Erin D. Fuller
Christopher D. Still
Tooraj Mirshahi
Jonathan Z. Luo
John D. Overton
George D. Yancopoulos
Yashu Liu
Alexander H. Li
Aeron Small
Omri Gottesman
Julia Kozlitina
Jeffrey G. Reid
Stefan Stender
David Esopi
William C. Olson
Michael Feldman
Colm O'Dushlaine
Alexander E. Lopez
Nehal Gosalia
Sun Y. Kim
Aris Baras
Source :
The New England journal of medicine. 378(12)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Elucidation of the genetic factors underlying chronic liver disease may reveal new therapeutic targets. METHODS: We used exome sequence data and electronic health records from 46,544 participants in the DiscovEHR human genetics study to identify genetic variants associated with serum levels of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST). Variants that were replicated in three additional cohorts (12,527 persons) were evaluated for association with clinical diagnoses of chronic liver disease in DiscovEHR study participants and two independent cohorts (total of 37,173 persons) and with histopathological severity of liver disease in 2391 human liver samples. RESULTS: A splice variant (rs72613567:TA) in HSD17B13, encoding the hepatic lipid droplet protein hydroxysteroid 17-beta dehydrogenase 13, was found to be associated with reduced levels of ALT (P=4.20×10(−12)) and AST (P=6.2×10(−10)). Among DiscovEHR study participants, this variant was found to be associated with a reduced risk of alcoholic liver disease (by 42% [95% confidence interval {CI}, 20 to 58] among heterozygotes and by 53% [95% CI, 3 to 77] among homozygotes), nonalcoholic liver disease (by 17% [95% CI, 8 to 25] among heterozygotes and by 30% [95% CI, 13 to 43] among homozygotes), alcoholic cirrhosis (by 42% [95% CI, 14 to 61] among heterozygotes and by 73% [95% CI, 15 to 91] among homozygotes), and nonalcoholic cirrhosis (by 26% [95% CI, 7 to 40] among heterozygotes and by 49% [95% CI, 15 to 69] among homozygotes). Associations were confirmed in two independent cohorts. The rs72613567:TA variant was associated with a reduced risk of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, but not steatosis, in human liver samples. The rs72613567:TA variant mitigated liver injury associated with the risk-increasing PNPLA3 p.I148M allele and resulted in an unstable and truncated protein with reduced enzymatic activity. CONCLUSIONS: A loss-of-function variant in HSD17B13 is associated with a reduced risk of chronic liver disease and of progression from steatosis to steatohepatitis. (Funded by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and others.)

Details

ISSN :
15334406
Volume :
378
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0407a88e3310d0086d130821947dae9f