4.5 Article

Gene Conversion Between Cationic Trypsinogen (PRSS1) and the Pseudogene Trypsinogen 6 (PRSS3P2) in Patients with Chronic Pancreatitis

Journal

HUMAN MUTATION
Volume 36, Issue 3, Pages 350-356

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/humu.22747

Keywords

hereditary pancreatitis; gene conversion; trypsinogen; autoactivation; genetic risk

Funding

  1. Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [GANI-MED 03152061A, 0314107]
  2. European Union [EU-FP-7-REGPOT-2010-1]
  3. EFRE-State Ministry of Economics MV [V-630-S-150-2012/132/133]
  4. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01DK058088, R01DK082412, R01DK095753]
  5. Ministry of Science and Higher Education [3942/E-215/S/2014]

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Mutations of the human cationic trypsinogen gene (PRSS1) are frequently found in association with hereditary pancreatitis. The most frequent variants p.N29I and p.R122H are recognized as disease-causing mutations. Three pseudogene paralogs in the human trypsinogen family, including trypsinogen 6 (PRSS3P2), carry sequence variations in exon 3 that mimic the p.R122H mutation. In routine genetic testing of patients with chronic pancreatitis, we identified in two unrelated individuals similar gene conversion events of 24-71 nucleotides length between exon 3 of the PRSS1 (acceptor) and PRSS3P2 (donor) genes. The converted allele resulted in three nonsynonymous alterations c.343T>A (p.S115T), c.347G>C (p.R116P), and c.365_366delinsAT (p.R122H). Functional analysis of the conversion triple mutant revealed markedly increased autoactivation resulting in high and sustained trypsin activity in the presence of chymotrypsin C. This activation phenotype was identical to that of the p.R122H mutant. In addition, cellular secretion of the triple mutant from transfected HEK 293T cells was increased about twofold and this effect was attributable to mutation p.R116P. Our observations confirm and extend the notion that recombination events between members of the trypsinogen family can generate high-risk PRSS1 alleles. The pathogenic phenotype of the novel conversion is explained by a unique combination of increased trypsinogen activation and secretion.

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