Increased Prevalence of Rare Sucrase-isomaltase Pathogenic Variants in Irritable Bowel Syndrome Patients

Patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) often associate their symptoms to certain foods. In congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency (CSID), recessive mutations in the SI gene (coding for the disaccharidase digesting sucrose and 60% of dietary starch)1 cause clinical features of IBS through col...

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Veröffentlicht in:CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY 2018-10, Vol.16 (10), p.1673-1676
Hauptverfasser: Garcia-Etxebarria, Koldo, Zheng, Tenghao, Bonfiglio, Ferdinando, Bujanda, Luis, Dlugosz, Aldona, Lindberg, Greger, Schmidt, Peter T, Karling, Pontus, Ohlsson, Bodil, Simren, Magnus, Walter, Susanna, Nardone, Gerardo, Cuomo, Rosario, Usai-Satta, Paolo, Galeazzi, Francesca, Neri, Matteo, Portincasa, Piero, Bellini, Massimo, Barbara, Giovanni, Jonkers, Daisy, Eswaran, Shanti, Chey, William D, Kashyap, Purna, Chang, Lin, Mayer, Emeran A, Wouters, Mira M, Boeckxstaens, Guy, Camilleri, Michael, Franke, Andre, D'Amato, Mauro
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) often associate their symptoms to certain foods. In congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency (CSID), recessive mutations in the SI gene (coding for the disaccharidase digesting sucrose and 60% of dietary starch)1 cause clinical features of IBS through colonic accumulation of undigested carbohydrates, triggering bowel symptoms.2 Hence, in a previous study,3 we hypothesized that CSID variants reducing SI enzymatic activity may contribute to development of IBS symptoms. We detected association with increased risk of IBS for 4 rare loss-of-function variants typically found in (homozygous) CSID patients, because carriers (heterozygous) of these rare variants were more common in patients than in controls.1,4 Through a 2-step computational and experimental strategy, the present study aimed to determine whether other (dys-)functional SI variants are associated with risk of IBS in addition to known CSID mutations. We first aimed to identify all SI rare pathogenic variants (SI-RPVs) on the basis of integrated Mendelian Clinically Applicable Pathogenicity (M-CAP) and Combined Annotation Dependent Depletion (CADD) predictive (clinically relevant) scores; next, we inspected genotype data currently available for 2207 IBS patients from a large ongoing project to compare SI-RPV case frequencies with ethnically matched population frequencies from the Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC).
ISSN:1542-3565