| Literature DB >> 34009629 |
Masayuki Sakiyama1,2, Hirotaka Matsuo3, Yu Toyoda1, Yuiko Yonekura2, Takahiro Ishikawa2, Akiyoshi Nakayama1, Toshihide Higashino1, Yusuke Kawamura1, Norihiro Fujimoto2, Nariyoshi Shinomiya1, Takahiro Satoh4.
Abstract
Photosensitivity is a skin reaction disorder mediated by phototoxic and/or photoallergic mechanisms. The accumulation of porphyrins is generally considered to induce phototoxicity. ATP-binding cassette subfamily G member 2 (ABCG2) has been identified as a transporter of porphyrins and its common variants-p.Gln126Ter (rs72552713) and p.Gln141Lys (rs2231142)-reportedly decrease the function of porphyrin transport in vitro; however, the physiological importance of ABCG2 as a porphyrin transporter remains to be fully elucidated. We herein investigated whether ABCG2 dysfunction could lead to porphyrin accumulation and photosensitivity in Japanese subjects, and found it to be significantly correlated with erythrocyte protoporphyrin levels (P = 0.012). This appears to be the first clinical finding of ABCG2 dysfunction-associated protoporphyrin accumulation in humans. We divided the patients into a chronic actinic dermatosis (CAD) group and a non-CAD group. CAD was diagnosed based on the criteria of reduced minimal erythema doses to ultraviolet B (UVB) and/or ultraviolet A (UVA). The non-CAD group was composed of patients who exhibited normal reactions to UVB and UVA on phototesting, but had histories of recurrent erythema/papules on sun-exposed areas. Estimated ABCG2 function according to ABCG2 genotypes in the non-CAD group was significantly lower than in the general Japanese population (P = 0.045). In contrast, no difference was found in ABCG2 function between the CAD group and the general population, suggesting that ABCG2 dysfunction might be a genetic factor in non-CAD patients with clinical photosensitivity. In this context, genetic dysfunction of ABCG2 might be an overlooked pathological etiology of "photosensitivity of unknown cause."Entities:
Keywords: ABC transporter; Genetic variations; Photodermatosis; Phototoxicity; Porphyrin transport
Year: 2021 PMID: 34009629 PMCID: PMC8197704 DOI: 10.1007/s13577-021-00534-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Cell ISSN: 0914-7470 Impact factor: 4.174
Estimated ABCG2 function based on ABCG2 genotypes in photosensitive patients and a general Japanese population
| Estimated ABCG2 function | Diplotypea | CAD patients | Non-CAD photosensitive patients | General Japanese populationb |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full function | *1/*1 | 4 (57.1%) | 4 (25.0%) | 253 (50.6%) |
| 3/4 function | *1/*2 | 2 (28.6%) | 8 (50.0%) | 177 (35.4%) |
| ≤ 1/2 function | *2/*2, *3/*1, *3/*2 or *3/*3 | 1 (14.3%) | 4 (25.0%) | 70 (14.0%) |
| Total | – | 7 (100%) | 16 (100%) | 500 (100%) |
| Reference [ |
CAD chronic actinic dermatosis
a*1, *2 and *3 represent haplotypes “C–C” (Q126 and Q141), “C-A” (Q126 and K141) and “T-C” (X126 and Q141) of two dysfunctional variants, p.Q126X (c.376C > T; rs72552713) and p.Q141K (c.421C > A; rs2231142), respectively
bData on the general Japanese population were obtained from our previous report [13]
cP values were calculated using a trend test (Cochran–Armitage test) compared with the general Japanese population
Fig. 1Association between genetic dysfunction of ABCG2 and higher erythrocyte protoporphyrin levels in photosensitive patients. The degrees of ABCG2 function were determined for 23 patients with photosensitivity based on their genotypes of two common dysfunctional variants of ABCG2, p.Q126X and p.Q141K. Data are expressed as mean (which is given within the bars) ± SEM. The P value was calculated using linear regression analysis