4.6 Article

Bicarbonate Transport in Cystic Fibrosis and Pancreatitis

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CELLS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells11010054

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CFTR; cystic fibrosis; pancreatitis; bicarbonate

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This review examines the role of CFTR in driving chloride, bicarbonate, and fluid secretion in the pancreatic duct, focusing on its involvement in genetic and acquired forms of pancreatitis. The potential of CFTR modulator therapy and the use of pancreatic organoids to study CFTR function are also discussed.
CFTR, the cystic fibrosis (CF) gene-encoded epithelial anion channel, has a prominent role in driving chloride, bicarbonate and fluid secretion in the ductal cells of the exocrine pancreas. Whereas severe mutations in CFTR cause fibrosis of the pancreas in utero, CFTR mutants with residual function, or CFTR variants with a normal chloride but defective bicarbonate permeability (CFTRBD), are associated with an enhanced risk of pancreatitis. Recent studies indicate that CFTR function is not only compromised in genetic but also in selected patients with an acquired form of pancreatitis induced by alcohol, bile salts or smoking. In this review, we summarize recent insights into the mechanism and regulation of CFTR-mediated and modulated bicarbonate secretion in the pancreatic duct, including the role of the osmotic stress/chloride sensor WNK1 and the scaffolding protein IRBIT, and current knowledge about the role of CFTR in genetic and acquired forms of pancreatitis. Furthermore, we discuss the perspectives for CFTR modulator therapy in the treatment of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency and pancreatitis and introduce pancreatic organoids as a promising model system to study CFTR function in the human pancreas, its role in the pathology of pancreatitis and its sensitivity to CFTR modulators on a personalized basis.

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