Genetic and functional analysis of chymotrypsin-like protease (CTRL) in chronic pancreatitis

Katharina Eiseler, Lea Neppl, Andreas W. Schmidt, Beate Rauscher, Maren Ewers, Emmanuelle Masson, Jian Min Chen, Claude Férec, Vinciane Rebours, Tassos Grammatikopoulos, Pierre Foskett, William Greenhalf, Christopher Halloran, John Neoptolemos, Tobias B. Haack, Stephan Ossowski, Marc Sturm, Jonas Rosendahl, Helmut Laumen, Heiko Witt

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Genetic predisposition is crucial in the pathogenesis of early-onset chronic pancreatitis (CP). So far, several genetic alterations have been identified as risk factors, predominantly in genes encoding digestive enzymes. However, many early-onset CP cases have no identified underlying cause. Chymotrypsins are a family of serine proteases that can cleave trypsinogen and lead to its degradation. Because genetic alterations in the chymotrypsins CTRC, CTRB1, and CTRB2 are associated with CP, we genetically and functionally investigated chymotrypsin-like protease (CTRL) as a potential risk factor. Methods: We screened 1005 non-alcoholic CP patients and 1594 controls for CTRL variants by exome sequencing. We performed Western blots and activity assays to analyse secretion and proteolytic activity. We measured BiP mRNA expression to investigate the potential impact of identified alterations on endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. Results: We identified 13 heterozygous non-synonymous CTRL variants: five exclusively in patients and three only in controls. Functionality was unchanged in 6/13 variants. Four alterations showed normal secretion but reduced (p.G20S, p.G56S, p.G61S) or abolished (p.S208F) activity. Another three variants (p.C201Y, p.G215R and p.C220G) were not secreted and already showed reduced or no activity intracellularly. However, intracellular retention did not lead to ER stress. Conclusion: We identified several CTRL variants, some showing potent effects on protease function and secretion. We observed these effects in variants found in patients and controls, and CTRL loss-of-function variants were not significantly more common in patients than controls. Therefore, CTRL is unlikely to play a relevant role in the development of CP.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)957-963
Number of pages7
JournalPancreatology
Volume23
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2023

Keywords

  • CTRL
  • Chronic pancreatitis
  • Chymotrypsin-like protease
  • Genetics

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