Abstract
Abstract
Background and Aims: A variant (p.Arg225Trp) of peroxisomal acyl-CoA oxidase 2 (ACOX2), involved in bile acid (BA) side-chain shortening, has been associated with unexplained persistent hypertransaminasemia and accumulation of C27-BAs, mainly 3α,7α,12α-trihydroxy- 5β- cholestanoic acid (THCA).
We aimed to investigate the prevalence of ACOX2 deficiency-associated hypertransaminasemia (ADAH), its response to ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), elucidate its pathophysiological mechanism and identify other inborn errors that could cause this alteration.
Methods and Results: Among 33 patients with unexplained hypertransaminasemia from 11 hospitals and 13 of their relatives, seven individuals with
abnormally high C27-BA levels (>50% of total BAs) were identified by high-performance liquid chromatography-mass
spectrometry. The p.Arg225Trp variant was found in homozygosity (exon amplification/sequencing) in two
patients and three family members. Two additional nonrelated patients were heterozygous carriers of different alleles: c.673C>T (p.Arg225Trp) and c.456_459del (p.Thr154fs). In patients with ADAH, impaired liver expression of ACOX2, but not ACOX3, was found (immunohistochemistry). Treatment with
UDCA normalized aminotransferase levels. Incubation of HuH-7
hepatoma cells with THCA, which was efficiently taken up, but not through BA transporters, increased reactive oxygen species production (flow cytometry), endoplasmic reticulum stress biomarkers (GRP78, CHOP, and XBP1-S/
XBP1-U ratio), and BAXα expression (reverse transcription followed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction and immunoblot), whereas cell viability was decreased (tetrazolium salt-based cell viability test). THCA-induced cell toxicity was higher than that of major C24-BAs
and was not prevented by UDCA. Fourteen predicted ACOX2 variants were generated (site-directed
mutagenesis) and expressed in HuH-7 cells. Functional tests to determine their ability to metabolize THCA identified six with the potential to cause ADAH.
Conclusions: Dysfunctional ACOX2 has been found in several patients with unexplained hypertransaminasemia. This condition can be accurately identified
by a noninvasive diagnostic strategy based on plasma BA profiling and ACOX2 sequencing. Moreover, UDCA treatment can efficiently attenuate liver damage in these patients.
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El proyecto reúne una cohorte multicéntrica (11 hospitales) de pacientes con hipertransaminasemia inexplicada y familiares, evaluados mediante perfilado de ácidos biliares por HPLC–MS y secuenciación de ACOX2, identificando sujetos con C27-BA >50% del total y variantes patogénicas (incluida p.Arg225Trp y una variante frameshift). Se documenta disminución de expresión hepática de ACOX2 y una respuesta clínica marcada a ácido ursodesoxicólico (UDCA) con normalización de aminotransferasas.
Además, el repositorio incluye experimentos mecanísticos en células HuH-7 que muestran que THCA induce estrés oxidativo, estrés del retículo endoplásmico (GRP78, CHOP, splicing de XBP1), aumento de señales proapoptóticas (BAXα) y reducción de viabilidad celular; y una batería de mutagénesis dirigida con ensayos funcionales para identificar variantes de ACOX2 con capacidad de alterar el metabolismo de THCA y potencial de causar ADAH. En conjunto, el trabajo propone una estrategia diagnóstica no invasiva (perfil de BA + genética) y respalda UDCA como tratamiento eficaz para atenuar el daño hepático en estos pacientes.
Citation
Alonso‐Peña, Marta1,2; Espinosa‐Escudero, Ricardo1; Herraez, Elisa1,3; Briz, Oscar1,3; Cagigal, Maria Luisa4; Gonzalez‐Santiago, Jesus M.5; Ortega‐Alonso, Aida6; Fernandez‐Rodriguez, Conrado7; Bujanda, Luis3,8; Calvo Sanchez, Marta9; D´Avola, Delia10; Londoño, Maria‐Carlota3,11,12; Diago, Moises13; Fernandez‐Checa, Jose C.3,12,14,15; Garcia‐Ruiz, Carmen3,12,14,15; Andrade, Raul J.3,6; Lammert, Frank16,17; Prieto, Jesus3,10; Crespo, Javier2; Juamperez, Javier18; Diaz‐Gonzalez, Alvaro2; Monte, Maria J.1,3; Marin, Jose J. G.*,1,3. Beneficial effect of ursodeoxycholic acid in patients with acyl‐CoA oxidase 2 (ACOX2) deficiency–associated hypertransaminasemia. Hepatology 76(5):p 1259-1274, November 2022. | DOI: 10.1002/hep.32517
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