Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0149521 (
chronic pancreatitis
)
7,199
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The p.Val754Met variant, described in 1996 in a CF patient, has been considered a CF mutation. However, biochemical aspects, results of functional studies and, finally, the identification of a complex deletion removing exons 3 to 10 and 14b to 16 in cis of p.Val754Met in a CF patient, argue against a strong deleterious effect. An inventory through the French CF network of patients carrying p.Val754Met led to the registration of seven patients (CF: n=4; idiopathic
chronic pancreatitis
: n=3) and six healthy individuals, all heterozygous for the variation. Extensive
CFTR
gene analysis was carried out, including the search for large rearrangements and other possible mutations. The complex deletion, whose breakpoints are described here, was found only in the four CF patients, in association with the same haplotype. This data, added to the fact that the p.[Phe508del]+[Val754Met] genotype was found in a healthy individual, bring further arguments against the association of p.Val754Met with CF. We thus suggest looking for a possible complex allele whenever p.Val754Met is detected and considering it neutral regarding genetic counseling when found in isolation.
...
PMID:A new large CFTR rearrangement illustrates the importance of searching for complex alleles. 1678 10
Mutations and polymorphisms in the SPINK1 gene, which encodes trypsin's physiological inhibitor, pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor, have been found to be associated with
chronic pancreatitis
. However, to date, all currently reported SPINK1 variants are either single-nucleotide substitutions or microinsertions/deletions. It is possible that large genomic rearrangements at this locus may underlie certain cases of
chronic pancreatitis
. However, such events, if indeed they exist, may have been overlooked by conventional PCR-based techniques. Here we attempted to screen all four exons as well as the promoter region of the SPINK1 gene for large genomic deletions by means of quantitative high-performance liquid chromatography analysis. Of the 47 pancreatitis families (not carrying any known PRSS1, SPINK1 and
CFTR
variants/mutations after screening the coding regions by our previously established denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography methods), one family was suggested to carry a large genomic deletion in the SPINK1 gene. The aberrant chromosomal junction was encapsulated by long-range PCR and the breakpoints were determined by direct sequencing of the rearranged fragment. A 2-bp short direct repeat was present at the deletion breakpoints; this simple deletion (c.1-320_c.55+961del1336 bp) can thus in principle be explained by replication slippage. Identification of this lesion has not only expanded the SPINK1 mutational spectrum but also served to identify a novel mutational mechanism causing
chronic pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Detection of a large genomic deletion in the pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor (SPINK1) gene. 1682 94
Chronic pancreatitis
(CP) is characterised by pancreatic inflammation and fibrosis leading eventually to destruction of pancreatic parenchyma and loss of exocrine and endocrine function. A model of interactions between environmental triggers of pancreatic inflammation and disease susceptibility or modifying genes (including PRSS1, SPINK1 and
CFTR
) provides a framework within which to understand disease pathogenesis. Early in the disease, when fibrosis is mild and pancreatic damage limited, it is difficult to distinguish CP from recurrent acute pancreatitis (RAP) although it is likely these represent opposite ends of a spectrum of disease with a common aetiology in which CP represents either a later disease stage or disease in individuals predisposed to generate a chronic fibrogenic inflammatory response. Pain is a dominant feature resulting in part from neuroimmune interactions within the pancreas. Diagnosis at an early stage of disease is challenging, though in later stages is dependent upon the demonstration of pancreatic fibrosis and duct ectasia using one or more imaging modalities including transabdominal and endoscopic ultrasound, CT and MRCP or ERCP. Current treatments are largely supportive and reactive. The challenge for pediatricians is to achieve diagnosis at an early stage of the disease and to develop treatments that can alter its natural history.
...
PMID:Chronic pancreatitis. 1709 Sep 3
Hereditary pancreatitis should be assumed if other risk factors for the disease can not been identified and if the patient has a family history for recurrent pancreatitis,
chronic pancreatitis
or pancreatic cancer. Since patients with
chronic pancreatitis
due to mutations in the cationic trypsinogen-gene have a much higher lifetime risk of developing pancreatic cancer, specifically if they are smokers, an adequate long-term follow up in specialized centers is recommended. The most frequent genetic changes in patients with hereditary pancreatitis are mutations in the cationic trypsinogen gene. Mutations in the
CFTR
-gene or SPINK1-gene have been reported in patients with idiopathic pancreatitis. The clinical relevance and the therapeutic consequences of these mutations is still controversial. Genetic testing is recommended when a patient with idiopathic pancreatitis is under 25 years at diagnosis or when one or more family members have either pancreatitis or pancreatic cancer. Genetic analysis of asymptomatic family members should only be offered after adequate genetic counselling. Prenatal diagnostic is not recommended.
...
PMID:[Hereditary pancreatitis]. 1711 46
Early-stage
chronic pancreatitis
may be undetected as a clinical entity. However, it may carry a definite risk for subsequent secondary damage, depending on the etiology of the disease. Therefore, the most important question is whether indeed the patient in question does have early-stage
chronic pancreatitis
rather than oligosymptomatic advanced-stage
chronic pancreatitis
. This can be easily determined by appropriate imaging such as abdominal computed tomography. For early changes, endoscopic ultrasound is superior to any other technique. Endosonography may also tell about anatomical obstacles (e.g., papillary stenosis, pancreas divisum) that may be treated to prevent progression of the disease. Treatment options at this stage are endoscopic for the most part. Depending on the etiology and familiar/hereditary background of the given patient, one must look further into molecular markers. Such markers may give an estimate on the progression or dynamics of the disease in the future and include mutations in the cationic (PRSS1) and anionic (PRSS2) trypsinogen genes as well as mutations in the serine protease (SPINK1) or cystic fibrosis (
CFTR
) genes. Admitted ly, these are not markers of early-stage
chronic pancreatitis
but must be investigated if and when such pathogenesis is suspected. Further, rare forms of
chronic pancreatitis
, such as autoimmune pancreatitis, which can be cured by appropriate medical treatment with steroids, must be excluded. Markers for autoimmune pancreatitis are elevated serum IgG, especially IgG4, and autoantibodies to carbonic anhydrase (type II) and lactoferrin. It is noteworthy that these markers, present in almost every Asian patient with autoimmune pancreatitis, are mostly lacking in Caucasian populations of patients with autoimmune pancreatitis.
...
PMID:What are the useful biological and functional markers of early-stage chronic pancreatitis? 1723 31
Quantitative fluorescent multiplex PCR (QFM-PCR) was established in order to make possible the rapid and efficient mutational analysis of the pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor (SPINK1) gene. Using QFM-PCR, a novel heterozygous deletion encompassing the entire SPINK1 gene was identified in one of nine newly recruited French Caucasian families with
chronic pancreatitis
. The breakpoints were fully characterized and the approximately 30 kb deletion was termed c.1-15969_c.240+7702del30588bp. Whilst sequences with the potential to form non-B DNA structures were found to span both the 5' and 3' deletion breakpoints, the generation of this gross deletion is potentially explicable in terms of non-homologous end-joining facilitated by the presence of a 1-bp microhomology at the two ends. The SPINK1 gene deletion identified in the index patient was also detected in her affected father and paternal uncle but not in 50 healthy French Caucasians. Remarkably, in all three affected individuals, the SPINK1 deletion was found to be co-inherited with a heterozygous p.L997F missense mutation in the unlinked
CFTR
gene, a lesion previously reported to be associated with a variety of cystic fibrosis-related diseases including idiopathic pancreatitis. Given that the SPINK1 deletion constitutes a clear-cut disease-causing factor, it may be that the
CFTR
missense mutation acts as a disease modifier in the context of this particular family.
...
PMID:Co-inheritance of a novel deletion of the entire SPINK1 gene with a CFTR missense mutation (L997F) in a family with chronic pancreatitis. 1768 20
Chronic pancreatitis
characterized by an early onset should be extensively investigated including the search for a mutation of the PRSS1, SPINK-1 or
CFTR
genes and potential features of autoimmune pancreatitis. We here describe a case of
chronic pancreatitis
with an onset at a very young age in which a mutation of the PRSS1 and several features of autoimmune pancreatitis were identified.
...
PMID:Concomitant autoimmune and genetic pancreatitis leads to severe inflammatory conditions. 1844 14
Tropical calcific pancreatitis (TCP) is a subtype of
chronic pancreatitis
which is unique to tropical regions. Patients present at young age with recurrent abdominal pain, nutritional deficiencies, and insulin-requiring diabetes. For a long time, the aetiology of this disorder was poorly understood. Several environmental factors, such as malnutrition or the consumption of toxic food components such as cyanogenic glycosides, were proposed as pathogenic factors. In the last decade, a major impact on the understanding of the aetiology of TCP has come from genetic studies on hereditary and idiopathic
chronic pancreatitis
. Genetic alterations in at least five genetic loci are clearly associated with
chronic pancreatitis
in the Western world. These include alterations in genes coding for trypsinogens, the most abundant digestive enzymes (PRSS1 and PRSS2), the trypsin inhibitor (SPINK1) and the trypsin-degrading enzyme, chymotrypsinogen C (CTRC). In addition, alterations in the cystic fibrosis (
CFTR
) gene are associated with idiopathic pancreatitis. TCP clinically resembles non-alcoholic
chronic pancreatitis
of Western countries, suggesting that similar genetic defects might also be of importance in this disease entity. Indeed, alterations in at least two genes, SPINK1 and CTRC, are strongly associated with TCP. The current review focuses on the recent developments in the understanding of the genetic basis of inherited pancreatitis, with special emphasis on TCP.
...
PMID:Genetic aspects of tropical calcific pancreatitis. 1860 51
Alcohol abuse is one of the most common risk factor for
chronic pancreatitis
, but the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms remain unclear. The aim of this study was to identify genes that contribute to susceptibility or resistance for alcoholic
chronic pancreatitis
by screening the whole genome. Sixty-five patients with alcoholic
chronic pancreatitis
(63 men and 2 women, mean age 55.2 years) and 99 healthy Japanese controls were enrolled in this study. This was an association study using 400 polymorphic microsatellite markers with an average spacing of 10.8 cM distributed throughout the whole genome. This search revealed 10 candidate susceptibility regions and 5 candidate resistant regions throughout the genome. No specific microsatellite markers were detected in association with previously reported susceptibility genes for
chronic pancreatitis
, such as PRSS1, PRSS2, CTRC, SPINK1,
CFTR
, ALDH2, and CYP2E1. Among the statistically significant markers, D15S1007 on chromosome 15q14 showed strong evidence for disease susceptibility (70.8% vs. 35.1%, Pc = 0.0001). Within 500 kb of D15S1007, several genes were candidate genes for susceptibility, including FMN1, DKFZP686C2281, LOC440268, RYR3, and AVEN, This study identified 10 candidate susceptibility and 5 candidate resistant regions that may contain genes involved in ACP pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Microsatellite scan identifies new candidate genes for susceptibility to alcoholic chronic pancreatitis in Japanese patients. 1909 30
In 1996, shortly after a locus for hereditary pancreatitis had been mapped to chromosome 7q35, an apparent gain-of-function missense mutation, p.R122H, in the cationic trypsinogen gene (PRSS1) was identified. Thereafter, the search for
chronic pancreatitis
-associated genetic factors has been largely focused on one form of genetic variation, namely, single nucleotide substitutions (SNSs). Only very recently has another type of genetic variation - copy number variations (CNVs) - been found to cause the disease. First, we identified duplication and triplication of an approximately 605 kb segment on chromosome 7q35 in French white patients with hereditary or idiopathic
chronic pancreatitis
. These alterations increased the copy number of PRSS1 as well as PRSS2, which encodes anionic trypsinogen. Second, we characterized a hybrid trypsinogen gene, in which exons 1 and 2 were derived from PRSS2 and exons 3 to 5 from PRSS1. Interestingly, this hybrid gene had two independent gain-of-function effects: increased trypsinogen gene copy number and it contained the p.N29I pancreatitis-causing missense mutation. Lastly, we identified two loss-of-function copy number mutations (deletions) in the SPINK1 gene, which encodes pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor (PSTI). Particularly, in one family with
chronic pancreatitis
, deletion of the complete SPINK1 gene was co-inherited with a
CFTR
missense mutation (p.L997F), revealing another layer of complexity between CNV and SNS interactions in the determination of a given disease phenotype. These findings represent a further demonstration of how studies of CNVs have altered the landscape of genetic research in the past few years and offer a fresh glimpse into the exciting realm of human CNVs.
...
PMID:Copy number variations in chronic pancreatitis. 1928 44
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>