| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3318631 | Pancreatology | 2006 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Background and Aims: Genetic predispositions play a major role in the development of chronic pancreatitis. Recently, a mutation in the keratin 8 gene (G62C) was reported to be associated with chronic pancreatitis in Italy. We determined whether mutations in the keratin 8 gene are associated with familial, sporadic and alcoholic recurrent acute or chronic pancreatitis in a population from the United States. Methods: We investigated the relevant genomic region of the keratin 8 gene in 80 patients with familial pancreatitis without a cationic tryp- sinogen (PRSS1) gene mutation from 52 different families, 21 patients with familial hereditary pancreatitis and a PRSS1 mutation from 20 different families, 126 patients with sporadic pancreatitis without a PRSS1 mutation, 61 patients with alcoholic pancreatitis and 271 controls by direct DNA sequencing.Results: We found the heterozygous G62C mutation in n = 3/80 patients (n = 2/52 patients from different families, 3.8%) with familial pancreatitis without PRSS1 mutation and in n = 3/126 patients (2.4%) with sporadic pancreatitis. We detected an adjacent heterozygous I63V mutation in n = 2/80 patients (n = 2/52 patients from different families, 3.8%) with familial pancreatitis without PRSS1 mutation and in n = 1/61 patients (1.6%) with alcoholic pancreatitis. We found the G62C mutation in n = 2/271 controls (0.7%) and the I63V mutation in n = 2/271 controls (0.7%). There were no statistically significant differences in the genotype frequencies between patients and controls (p > 0.05). Screening of additional available family members revealed that these variants did not segregate with the disease phenotype. There was no statistically significant difference in the frequency of these keratin 8 variants between patients with chronic pancreatitis and controls (p > 0.05).Conclusion: These keratin 8 variants are not associated with familial, sporadic or alcoholic pancreatitis.
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Authors
Alexander Schneider, Janette Lamb, M. Michael Barmada, Anthony Cuneo, Mary E. Money, David C. Whitcomb,
