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Chymotrypsin C (CTRC) variants that diminish activity or secretion are associated with chronic pancreatitis
Authors:Rosendahl Jonas  Witt Heiko  Szmola Richárd  Bhatia Eesh  Ozsvári Béla  Landt Olfert  Schulz Hans-Ulrich  Gress Thomas M  Pfützer Roland  Löhr Matthias  Kovacs Peter  Blüher Matthias  Stumvoll Michael  Choudhuri Gourdas  Hegyi Péter  te Morsche René H M  Drenth Joost P H  Truninger Kaspar  Macek Milan  Puhl Gero  Witt Ulrike  Schmidt Hartmut  Büning Carsten  Ockenga Johann  Kage Andreas  Groneberg David Alexander  Nickel Renate  Berg Thomas  Wiedenmann Bertram  Bödeker Hans  Keim Volker  Mössner Joachim  Teich Niels  Sahin-Tóth Miklós
Institution:Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of Leipzig, Philipp-Rosenthal-Strasse 27, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
Abstract:Chronic pancreatitis is a persistent inflammatory disease of the pancreas, in which the digestive protease trypsin has a fundamental pathogenetic role. Here we have analyzed the gene encoding the trypsin-degrading enzyme chymotrypsin C (CTRC) in German subjects with idiopathic or hereditary chronic pancreatitis. Two alterations in this gene, p.R254W and p.K247_R254del, were significantly overrepresented in the pancreatitis group, being present in 30 of 901 (3.3%) affected individuals but only 21 of 2,804 (0.7%) controls (odds ratio (OR) = 4.6; confidence interval (CI) = 2.6-8.0; P = 1.3 x 10(-7)). A replication study identified these two variants in 10 of 348 (2.9%) individuals with alcoholic chronic pancreatitis but only 3 of 432 (0.7%) subjects with alcoholic liver disease (OR = 4.2; CI = 1.2-15.5; P = 0.02). CTRC variants were also found in 10 of 71 (14.1%) Indian subjects with tropical pancreatitis but only 1 of 84 (1.2%) healthy controls (OR = 13.6; CI = 1.7-109.2; P = 0.0028). Functional analysis of the CTRC variants showed impaired activity and/or reduced secretion. The results indicate that loss-of-function alterations in CTRC predispose to pancreatitis by diminishing its protective trypsin-degrading activity.
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