| Literature DB >> 36121467 |
Nikola Fritz1, Sabrina Berens2, Yuanjun Dong1, Cristina Martínez1,3,4, Stefanie Schmitteckert5, Lesley A Houghton6,7, Miriam Goebel-Stengel8,9, Verena Wahl1, Maria Kabisch10, Dorothea Götze1, Mauro D'Amato11,12,13, Tenghao Zheng11, Ralph Röth1,14, Hubert Mönnikes15, Jonas Tesarz2, Felicitas Engel2, Annika Gauss16, Martin Raithel17, Viola Andresen18, Jutta Keller18, Thomas Frieling19, Christian Pehl20, Christoph Stein-Thöringer21, Gerard Clarke22,23, Paul J Kennedy22,23, John F Cryan22,23,24, Timothy G Dinan22,23, Eamonn M M Quigley23,25, Robin Spiller26, Caroll Beltrán27, Ana María Madrid27, Verónica Torres27, Emeran A Mayer28, Gregory Sayuk29, Maria Gazouli30, George Karamanolis31, Mariona Bustamante32,33, Xavier Estivil34, Raquel Rabionet34, Per Hoffmann35, Markus M Nöthen35, Stefanie Heilmann-Heimbach35, Börge Schmidt36, André Franke37, Wolfgang Lieb38, Wolfgang Herzog2, Guy Boeckxstaens39, Mira M Wouters39, Magnus Simrén40, Gudrun A Rappold1,41, Maria Vicario42,43, Javier Santos42, Rainer Schaefert44,45, Justo Lorenzo-Bermejo10, Beate Niesler1,14,41.
Abstract
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a gut-brain disorder of multifactorial origin. Evidence of disturbed serotonergic function in IBS accumulated for the 5-HT3 receptor family. 5-HT3Rs are encoded by HTR3 genes and control GI function, and peristalsis and secretion, in particular. Moreover, 5-HT3R antagonists are beneficial in the treatment of diarrhea predominant IBS (IBS-D). We previously reported on functionally relevant SNPs in HTR3A c.-42C > T (rs1062613), HTR3C p.N163K (rs6766410), and HTR3E c.*76G > A (rs56109847 = rs62625044) being associated with IBS-D, and the HTR3B variant p.Y129S (rs1176744) was also described within the context of IBS. We performed a multi-center study to validate previous results and provide further evidence for the relevance of HTR3 genes in IBS pathogenesis. Therefore, genotype data of 2682 IBS patients and 9650 controls from 14 cohorts (Chile, Germany (2), Greece, Ireland, Spain, Sweden (2), the UK (3), and the USA (3)) were taken into account. Subsequent meta-analysis confirmed HTR3E c.*76G > A (rs56109847 = rs62625044) to be associated with female IBS-D (OR = 1.58; 95% CI (1.18, 2.12)). Complementary expression studies of four GI regions (jejunum, ileum, colon, sigmoid colon) of 66 IBS patients and 42 controls revealed only HTR3E to be robustly expressed. On top, HTR3E transcript levels were significantly reduced in the sigma of IBS patients (p = 0.0187); more specifically, in those diagnosed with IBS-D (p = 0.0145). In conclusion, meta-analysis confirmed rs56109847 = rs62625044 as a risk factor for female IBS-D. Expression analysis revealed reduced HTR3E levels in the sigmoid colon of IBS-D patients, which underlines the relevance of HTR3E in the pathogenesis of IBS-D.Entities:
Keywords: Females; IBS-D; Irritable bowel syndrome; Serotonin type 3 receptor
Year: 2022 PMID: 36121467 DOI: 10.1007/s00109-022-02244-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Med (Berl) ISSN: 0946-2716 Impact factor: 5.606