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      Genetic Analysis of Human Chymotrypsin-Like Elastases 3A and 3B (CELA3A and CELA3B) to Assess the Role of Complex Formation between Proelastases and Procarboxypeptidases in Chronic Pancreatitis

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          Abstract

          Human chymotrypsin-like elastases 3A and 3B (CELA3A and CELA3B) are the products of gene duplication and share 92% identity in their primary structure. CELA3B forms stable complexes with procarboxypeptidases A1 and A2 whereas CELA3A binds poorly due to the evolutionary substitution of Ala241 with Gly in exon 7. Since position 241 is polymorphic both in CELA3A (p.G241A) and CELA3B (p.A241G), genetic analysis can directly assess whether individual variability in complex formation might alter risk for chronic pancreatitis. Here we sequenced exon 7 of CELA3A and CELA3B in a cohort of 225 subjects with chronic pancreatitis (120 alcoholic and 105 non-alcoholic) and 300 controls of Hungarian origin. Allele frequencies were 2.5% for CELA3A p.G241A and 1.5% for CELA3B p.A241G in controls, and no significant difference was observed in patients. Additionally, we identified six synonymous variants, two missense variants, a gene conversion event and ten variants in the flanking intronic regions. Variant c.643-7G>T in CELA3B showed an association with alcoholic chronic pancreatitis with a small protective effect (OR = 0.59, 95% CI = 0.39–0.89, p = 0.01). Functional analysis of missense variants revealed no major defects in secretion or activity. We conclude that variants affecting amino-acid position 241 in CELA3A and CELA3B are not associated with chronic pancreatitis, indicating that changes in complex formation between proelastases and procarboxypeptidases do not alter pancreatitis risk.

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          Most cited references15

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          Gene conversion: mechanisms, evolution and human disease.

          Gene conversion, one of the two mechanisms of homologous recombination, involves the unidirectional transfer of genetic material from a 'donor' sequence to a highly homologous 'acceptor'. Considerable progress has been made in understanding the molecular mechanisms that underlie gene conversion, its formative role in human genome evolution and its implications for human inherited disease. Here we assess current thinking about how gene conversion occurs, explore the key part it has played in fashioning extant human genes, and carry out a meta-analysis of gene-conversion events that are known to have caused human genetic disease.
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            SPINK1/PSTI polymorphisms act as disease modifiers in familial and idiopathic chronic pancreatitis.

            Gain-of-function trypsin mutations cause acute pancreatitis and chronic pancreatitis. Loss of trypsin inhibitor function may have similar effects. We investigated the prevalence of SPINK1 (PSTI) mutations in familial pancreatitis, idiopathic chronic pancreatitis, and controls. Genetic-linkage studies were performed in 5 familial pancreatitis families. The entire SPINK1 gene was sequenced in 112 affected individuals and 95 control DNA samples, and exon 3 was sequenced in 95 additional controls. X-ray crystallography-based model building and statistical studies were performed. Significant linkage between pancreatitis and 5q31.1-2 was excluded. Novel SPINK1 mutations, one D50E mutation, one IVS3+125 C>A, and five IVS3+184 T>A intronic polymorphisms were identified. The N34S and P55S mutations were observed in 29 of 112 patients (25%) as N34S/N34S (n = 7), N34S/wt (n = 19), N34S/P55S (n = 2), and N34S/D50E (n = 1). Three hundred eighty control alleles revealed 3 N34S (0.77%), 2 P55S (0.53%), and no D50E mutations. Age of disease onset and severity were similar between homozygous and heterozygous patients. Structural modeling revealed several possible pathophysiologic mechanisms for the N34S mutation. SPINK1 mutations are common in the population (approximately 2%), but are clearly associated with pancreatitis. The mutation-associated risk is low. Modeling and familial clustering suggest that SPINK1 mutations are disease modifying, possibly by lowering the threshold for pancreatitis from other genetic or environmental factors, but by themselves do not cause disease.
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              Increased activation of hereditary pancreatitis-associated human cationic trypsinogen mutants in presence of chymotrypsin C.

              Mutations in human cationic trypsinogen (PRSS1) cause autosomal dominant hereditary pancreatitis. Increased intrapancreatic autoactivation of trypsinogen mutants has been hypothesized to initiate the disease. Autoactivation of cationic trypsinogen is proteolytically regulated by chymotrypsin C (CTRC), which mitigates the development of trypsin activity by promoting degradation of both trypsinogen and trypsin. Paradoxically, CTRC also increases the rate of autoactivation by processing the trypsinogen activation peptide to a shorter form. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of CTRC on the autoactivation of clinically relevant trypsinogen mutants. We found that in the presence of CTRC, trypsinogen mutants associated with classic hereditary pancreatitis (N29I, N29T, V39A, R122C, and R122H) autoactivated at increased rates and reached markedly higher active trypsin levels compared with wild-type cationic trypsinogen. The A16V mutant, known for its variable disease penetrance, exhibited a smaller increase in autoactivation. The mechanistic basis of increased activation was mutation-specific and involved resistance to degradation (N29I, N29T, V39A, R122C, and R122H) and/or increased N-terminal processing by CTRC (A16V and N29I). These observations indicate that hereditary pancreatitis is caused by CTRC-dependent dysregulation of cationic trypsinogen autoactivation, which results in elevated trypsin levels in the pancreas.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                Int J Mol Sci
                Int J Mol Sci
                ijms
                International Journal of Molecular Sciences
                MDPI
                1422-0067
                20 December 2016
                December 2016
                : 17
                : 12
                : 2148
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Center for Exocrine Disorders, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Boston University Henry M. Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Boston, MA 02118, USA; andrea.parniczky@ 123456gmail.com (A.P.); heszter@ 123456bu.edu (E.H.); tothannadr@ 123456gmail.com (A.Z.T.)
                [2 ]First Department of Surgery, Semmelweis University, 1082 Budapest, Hungary; szucs.akos@ 123456gmail.com
                [3 ]Institute for Translational Medicine, University of Pécs, 7624 Pécs, Hungary; szentesiai@ 123456gmail.com (A.S.); hegyi2009@ 123456gmail.com (P.H.)
                [4 ]First Department of Medicine, University of Szeged, 6720 Szeged, Hungary; nemeth.balazs@ 123456med.u-szeged.hu
                [5 ]First Department of Medicine, University of Pécs, 7624 Pécs, Hungary; vincze.aron@ 123456pte.hu
                [6 ]Department of Gastroenterology, St. George Teaching Hospital of County Fejér, 8000 Székesfehérvár, Hungary; fizbeki@ 123456gmail.com
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: miklos@ 123456bu.edu ; Tel.: +1-617-414-1070; Fax: +1-617-414-1041
                [†]

                These authors contributed equally to this work.

                Article
                ijms-17-02148
                10.3390/ijms17122148
                5187948
                27999401
                8760b724-19ca-47d1-8d41-96fe8a1403a3
                © 2016 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

                This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 07 November 2016
                : 14 December 2016
                Categories
                Article

                Molecular biology
                pancreas,chronic pancreatitis,digestive protease,zymogen complexes,elastase
                Molecular biology
                pancreas, chronic pancreatitis, digestive protease, zymogen complexes, elastase

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