Abstract

Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 (PFIC3) is a hepatic disorder occurring predominantly in childhood and is difficult to diagnose. PFIC3, being a rare autosomal recessive disease, is caused by genetic mutations in both alleles of ABCB4, resulting in the disruption of the bile secretory pathway. The identification of pathogenic effects resulting from different mutations in ABCB4 is the key to revealing the internal cause of disease. These mutations cause truncation, instability, misfolding, and impaired trafficking of the MDR3 protein. Here, we reported a girl, with a history of intrahepatic cholestasis and progressive liver cirrhosis, with an elevated gamma-glutamyltransferase level. Genetic screening via whole exome sequencing found a novel homozygous missense mutation ABCB4:c.1195G>C:p.V399L, and the patient was diagnosed with PFIC3. Various computational tools predicted the variant to be deleterious and evolutionary conserved. For functional characterization studies, plasmids, encoding ABCB4 wild-type and selected established mutant constructs, were expressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK-293T) and hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2) cells. In vitro expression analysis observed a reduced expression of mutant protein compared to wild-type protein. We found that ABCB4 wild type was localized at the apical canalicular membrane, while mutant p.V399L showed intracellular retention. Intracellular mistrafficking proteins usually undergo proteasomal or lysosomal degradation. We found that after treatment with proteasomal inhibitor MG132 and lysosomal inhibitor bafilomycin A1, MDR3 expression of V399L was significantly increased. A decrease in MDR3 expression of mutant V399L protein may be a result of proteasomal or lysosomal degradation. Pharmacological modulator cyclosporin A and intracellular low temperature (30°C) treatment significantly rescued both the folding defect and the active maturation of the mutant protein. Our study identified a novel pathogenic mutation which expanded the mutational spectrum of the ABCB4 gene and may contribute to understanding the molecular basis of PFIC3. Therefore, genetic screening plays a conclusive role in the diagnosis of rare heterogenic disorders like PFIC3.

Highlights

  • Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 (PFIC3) is a subclass of heterogenic PFIC, a rare autosomal recessive liver disorder

  • Parents and the younger sister (9 years old) were normal without any evidence of cholestatic liver disease while one older sister died of the same disease at 10 years old

  • We examined whether a trafficking-defective mutant of ATP-binding cassette subfamily B member 4 BA1 (ABCB4):c.1195G>C:p.V399L could be rescued by cyclosporin A

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Summary

Introduction

Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 (PFIC3) is a subclass of heterogenic PFIC, a rare autosomal recessive liver disorder. MDR3 is primarily expressed at the canalicular membrane of the liver and acts as a phospholipid translocator, i.e., phosphatidylcholine (PC) It protects the hepatocyte membrane from detergent activity of bile salts [8]. In vitro studies demonstrated that the absence of PC floppase activity leads to impaired transport to the canalicular membrane, stops its binding with bile salts, and destabilizes mixed micelles. It can cause solubilization of the apical membrane and the hepatobiliary epithelium by detergent action of free bile salts, which induces inflammation and cell death of liver cells [12, 13]

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