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Protein misfolding in combination with other risk factors in CEL-HYB1-mediated chronic pancreatitis

Authors :
Tjora, Erling
Gravdal, Anny
Engjom, Trond
Cnop, Miriam
Johansson, Bente B.B.
Dimcevski, Georg G.G.
Molven, Anders
Fjeld, Karianne
Tjora, Erling
Gravdal, Anny
Engjom, Trond
Cnop, Miriam
Johansson, Bente B.B.
Dimcevski, Georg G.G.
Molven, Anders
Fjeld, Karianne
Source :
European journal of gastroenterology & hepatology
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objectives The hybrid allele of the carboxyl ester lipase gene (CEL-HYB1) is a genetic risk factor for chronic pancreatitis (CP) although the mechanism promoting disease development is largely unknown. Here, we aimed to clinically describe subjects carrying the CEL-HYB1 allele and to elucidate why the protein product is pathogenic by analyzing pancreatic secretions and cellular models. Methods Norwegian cases (n = 154) diagnosed with recurrent acute pancreatitis or CP were subjected to genetic screening by a CEL-HYB1-specific PCR assay followed by Sanger sequencing. For investigation of CEL-HYB1 protein secretion, duodenal juice samples from cases and controls were analyzed by western blotting. HEK293cells were transfected with constructs expressing CEL-HYB1 or the normal CEL protein (CEL-WT) and analyzed by qPCR, cell fractionation and western blotting. Results Two CEL-HYB1-positive families were identified. In both pedigrees, CEL-HYB1 did not fully co-segregate with disease. One proband had recurrent acute pancreatitis and was an active smoker. Her mother was a CEL-HYB1 carrier who had suffered from several attacks of acute pancreatitis until she stopped smoking. The other proband was diagnosed with CP and pancreas divisum. Her CEL-HYB1-positive parent was symptom-free but exhibited pancreatic imaging changes. When analyzing the CEL protein in duodenal juice, CEL-WT was readily detectable but no band corresponding to the risk variant was seen. In CEL-HYB1-transfected cells, we observed impaired protein secretion, protein aggregation and endoplasmic reticulum stress. Conclusion Our data suggest that CEL-HYB1, in combination with well-known pancreatitis risk factors, causes disease through the misfolding-dependent pathway of genetic CP risk.<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
European journal of gastroenterology & hepatology
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1313391224
Document Type :
Electronic Resource