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Functional variants in the sucrase-isomaltase gene associate with increased risk of irritable bowel syndrome

Authors :
Piero Portincasa
Fatemeh Hadizadeh
Gerardo Nardone
Giovanni Barbara
Lars Engstrand
Ghazaleh Assadi
Anna Andreasson
Louise B. Thingholm
Emeran A. Mayer
Lars Agréus
Lena Diekmann
John F. Baines
Martin Heine
Mauro D'Amato
Rosario Cuomo
Ottmar Distl
Ute Philipp
Aldona Dlugosz
Vincenzo Stanghellini
Magnus Simrén
Pontus Karling
Eva Maria Kuech
Andre Franke
C. Dierks
Matteo Neri
Michael Camilleri
Maria Henström
Maren von Köckritz-Blickwede
Ferdinando Bonfiglio
Susanna Walter
Hassan Y. Naim
Bodil Ohlsson
Mary E. Money
Greger Lindberg
Meriem Belheouane
Peter T. Schmidt
Lin Chang
Joseph Rafter
Paolo Usai-Satta
Francesca Galeazzi
Massimo Bellini
Femke-Anouska Heinsen
Tenghao Zheng
Henström, Maria
Diekmann, Lena
Bonfiglio, Ferdinando
Hadizadeh, Fatemeh
Kuech, Eva Maria
von Köckritz Blickwede, Maren
Thingholm, Louise B
Zheng, Tenghao
Assadi, Ghazaleh
Dierks, Claudia
Heine, Martin
Philipp, Ute
Distl, Ottmar
Money, Mary E
Belheouane, Meriem
Heinsen, Femke Anouska
Rafter, Joseph
Nardone, GERARDO ANTONIO PIO
Cuomo, Rosario
Usai Satta, Paolo
Galeazzi, Francesca
Neri, Matteo
Walter, Susanna
Simrén, Magnu
Karling, Pontu
Ohlsson, Bodil
Schmidt, Peter T
Lindberg, Greger
Dlugosz, Aldona
Agreus, Lar
Andreasson, Anna
Mayer, Emeran
Baines, John F
Engstrand, Lar
Portincasa, Piero
Bellini, Massimo
Stanghellini, Vincenzo
Barbara, Giovanni
Chang, Lin
Camilleri, Michael
Franke, Andre
Naim, Hassan Y
D'Amato, Mauro
Kuech, Eva-Maria
von Köckritz-Blickwede, Maren
Thingholm, Louise B.
Money, Mary E.
Heinsen, Femke-Anouska
Nardone, Gerardo
Usai-Satta, Paolo
Schmidt, Peter T.
Baines, John F.
Naim, Hassan Y.
Source :
Gut
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

ObjectiveIBS is a common gut disorder of uncertain pathogenesis. Among other factors, genetics and certain foods are proposed to contribute. Congenital sucrase–isomaltase deficiency (CSID) is a rare genetic form of disaccharide malabsorption characterised by diarrhoea, abdominal pain and bloating, which are features common to IBS. We tested sucrase–isomaltase (SI) gene variants for their potential relevance in IBS.DesignWe sequenced SI exons in seven familial cases, and screened four CSID mutations (p.Val557Gly, p.Gly1073Asp, p.Arg1124Ter and p.Phe1745Cys) and a common SI coding polymorphism (p.Val15Phe) in a multicentre cohort of 1887 cases and controls. We studied the effect of the 15Val to 15Phe substitution on SI function in vitro. We analysed p.Val15Phe genotype in relation to IBS status, stool frequency and faecal microbiota composition in 250 individuals from the general population.ResultsCSID mutations were more common in patients than asymptomatic controls (p=0.074; OR=1.84) and Exome Aggregation Consortium reference sequenced individuals (p=0.020; OR=1.57). 15Phe was detected in 6/7 sequenced familial cases, and increased IBS risk in case–control and population-based cohorts, with best evidence for diarrhoea phenotypes (combined p=0.00012; OR=1.36). In the population-based sample, 15Phe allele dosage correlated with stool frequency (p=0.026) and Parabacteroides faecal microbiota abundance (p=0.0024). The SI protein with 15Phe exhibited 35% reduced enzymatic activity in vitro compared with 15Val (pConclusionsSI gene variants coding for disaccharidases with defective or reduced enzymatic activity predispose to IBS. This may help the identification of individuals at risk, and contribute to personalising treatment options in a subset of patients.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gut
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0bbaf7cf787cb86498166072005d30a1