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Elastase 3B mutation links to familial pancreatitis with diabetes and pancreatic adenocarcinoma

Authors :
Alice Y. Chan
Diana L. Alba
Mark S. Anderson
Chester E. Chamberlain
Scott A. Oakes
Jhoanne L. Bautista
Justin Peng
Amy C. Berger
Paul Moore
Jessica T. Cortez
Zoe Quandt
Michael S. German
Mickie H. Cheng
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation, vol 129, iss 11
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2019.

Abstract

Although improvements in genetic analysis have greatly enhanced our understanding of the mechanisms behind pancreatitis, it continues to afflict many families for whom the hereditary factors remain unknown. Recent evaluation of a patient with a strong family history of pancreatitis prompted us to reexamine a large kindred originally reported over 50 years ago with an autosomal-dominant inheritance pattern of chronic pancreatitis, diabetes, and pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Whole-exome sequencing analysis identified a rare missense mutation in the gene encoding pancreas-specific protease elastase 3B (CELA3B) that cosegregates with disease. Studies of the mutant protein in vitro, in cell lines, and in CRISPR-Cas9–engineered mice indicate that this mutation causes translational upregulation of CELA3B, which, upon secretion and activation by trypsin, leads to uncontrolled proteolysis and recurrent pancreatitis. Although lesions in several other pancreatic proteases have been previously linked to hereditary pancreatitis, to our knowledge, this is the first known instance of a mutation in CELA3B and a defect in translational control contributing to this disease.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation, vol 129, iss 11
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97772a5d56616742144b2bc8b9b9cb3b