학술논문

A 584 bp deletion in CTRB2 inhibits chymotrypsin B2 activity and secretion and confers risk of pancreatic cancer.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Human Genetics. Oct2021, Vol. 108 Issue 10, p1852-1865. 14p.
Subject
*DISEASE risk factors
*PANCREATIC cancer
*GENOME-wide association studies
*CHYMOTRYPSIN
*HUMAN genome
Language
ISSN
0002-9297
Abstract
Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have discovered 20 risk loci in the human genome where germline variants associate with risk of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) in populations of European ancestry. Here, we fine-mapped one such locus on chr16q23.1 (rs72802365, p = 2.51 × 10−17, OR = 1.36, 95% CI = 1.31–1.40) and identified colocalization (PP = 0.87) with aberrant exon 5–7 CTRB2 splicing in pancreatic tissues (p GTEx = 1.40 × 10−69, β GTEx = 1.99; p LTG = 1.02 × 10−30, β LTG = 1.99). Imputation of a 584 bp structural variant overlapping exon 6 of CTRB2 into the GWAS datasets resulted in a highly significant association with pancreatic cancer risk (p = 2.83 × 10−16, OR = 1.36, 95% CI = 1.31–1.42), indicating that it may underlie this signal. Exon skipping attributable to the deletion (risk) allele introduces a premature stop codon in exon 7 of CTRB2 , yielding a truncated chymotrypsinogen B2 protein that lacks chymotrypsin activity, is poorly secreted, and accumulates intracellularly in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). We propose that intracellular accumulation of a nonfunctional chymotrypsinogen B2 protein leads to ER stress and pancreatic inflammation, which may explain the increased pancreatic cancer risk in carriers of CTRB2 exon 6 deletion alleles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]