AI Article Synopsis

  • - Researchers studied 25 children with unexplained high levels of serum gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) and identified genetic mutations linked to a rare liver disease, specifically looking at the ZFYVE19 gene.
  • - The study revealed that nine of these children had significant mutations that caused severe liver issues, including portal hypertension and congenital liver conditions, with some needing liver transplants.
  • - Findings suggest that defects in the ZFYVE19 gene may lead to problems in cellular structures called cilia, indicating a potential new genetic cause for this type of liver disease.

Article Abstract

Background: For many children with intrahepatic cholestasis and high-serum gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) activity, a genetic aetiology of hepatobiliary disease remains undefined. We sought to identify novel genes mutated in children with idiopathic high-GGT intrahepatic cholestasis, with clinical, histopathological and functional correlations.

Methods: We assembled a cohort of 25 children with undiagnosed high-GGT cholestasis and without clinical features of biliary-tract infection or radiological features of choledochal malformation, sclerosing cholangitis or cholelithiasis. Mutations were identified through whole-exome sequencing and targeted Sanger sequencing. We reviewed histopathological findings and assessed phenotypical effects of ZFYVE19 deficiency in cultured cells by immunofluorescence microscopy.

Results: Nine Han Chinese children harboured biallelic, predictedly complete loss-of-function pathogenic mutations in (c.314C>G, p.S105X; c.379C>T, p.Q127X; c.514C>T, p.R172X; c.547C>T, p.R183X; c.226A>G, p.M76V). All had portal hypertension and, at liver biopsy, histopathological features of the ductal plate malformation (DPM)/congenital hepatic fibrosis (CHF). Four children required liver transplantation for recurrent gastrointestinal haemorrhage. DPM/CHF was confirmed at hepatectomy, with sclerosing small-duct cholangitis. Immunostaining for two primary-cilium axonemal proteins found expression that was deficient intraluminally and ectopic within cholangiocyte cytoplasm. ZFYVE19 depletion in cultured cells yielded abnormalities of centriole and axoneme.

Conclusion: Biallelic mutations can lead to high-GGT cholestasis and DPM/CHF in vivo. In vitro, they can lead to centriolar and axonemal abnormalities. These observations indicate that mutation in results, through as yet undefined mechanisms, in a ciliopathy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2019-106706DOI Listing

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