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    Home»Health»New Study Sheds Light on the Cause of Severe Inflammatory Bowel Disease
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    New Study Sheds Light on the Cause of Severe Inflammatory Bowel Disease

    By Cedars-Sinai Medical CenterApril 26, 20231 Comment5 Mins Read
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    Stomach Pain Crohns Bowel Diarrhea
    Perianal Crohn’s disease is a type of inflammatory bowel disease that affects the area around the anus. It can cause symptoms such as pain, itching, and discharge, as well as more serious complications such as abscesses and fistulas.

    Scientists at Cedars-Sinai Have Identified a Genetic Variant That Is Associated With Perianal Crohn’s Disease

    Investigators at Cedars-Sinai have discovered a genetic variant that elevates an individual’s likelihood of experiencing perianal Crohn’s disease, which is considered to be the most severe form of Crohn’s disease.

    The genetic variant leads to modifications in DNA that result in a loss in protein function. This affects the body’s ability to identify and manage bacteria, making it less effective in combating infections.

    The discovery is published in the peer-reviewed journal Gut.

    “Fistulizing perianal Crohn’s disease can be a really miserable condition,” said co-senior author of the study Dermot McGovern, MD, Ph.D., director of Translational Research in the Cedars-Sinai F. Widjaja Foundation Inflammatory Bowel and Immunobiology Research Institute and the Joshua L. and Lisa Z. Greer Chair in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Genetics. “Our current therapies are really not very good at treating it, consequently this study addresses a very significant area of unmet medical need. By gaining an understanding about the underlying causes, we can begin to develop new treatment strategies for patients diagnosed with this chronic inflammatory condition, the majority of whom currently require surgery and often require multiple surgeries.”

    Perianal Crohn’s disease is a complication of Crohn’s disease, a chronic inflammatory disorder that affects the digestive tract. The complication causes inflammation and ulceration of the skin around the anus, as well as other structures in the perianal area. Perianal Crohn’s disease occurs in up to 40% of people with Crohn’s disease and has limited treatment responses, resulting in a poor quality of life.

    “We have become much more successful in identifying genetic variants associated with the risk of developing diseases, but what we did here is specifically focus on a very complicated and severe manifestation of Crohn’s disease. And that’s an unusual approach in genetic research,” said Talin Haritunians, Ph.D., a research assistant professor who is part of the McGovern Laboratory and co-first author of the study.

    Pinpointing Genetic Loci Linked to the Condition

    To discover genetic variants with a direct tie to this severe manifestation, investigators analyzed genetic data from three independent cohorts of patients with Crohn’s disease. The groups included a Cedars-Sinai cohort, an international genetics cohort recruited from over 20 countries, and a cohort recruited from seven academic research medical centers throughout the United States. The three groups totaled 4,000 patients with perianal Crohn’s disease and more than 11,000 Crohn’s disease patients without this complication.

    The team of scientists compared the cohorts to see if they could detect genetic loci, which are areas of the genome associated with developing this manifestation.

    The team identified 10 novel genetic loci and 14 known inflammatory bowel disease loci to be associated with the development of perianal complications.

    Complement Factor B (CFB) in Disease Progression

    During the functional characterization analysis, the team focused on a single change in a specific gene, called a SNP, that was associated with perianal Crohn’s Disease. This genetic variant affects a protein called Complement Factor B (CFB), which leads to a loss of function of this protein that is important for fighting infections, which may be why patients with this genetic change are more likely to have the condition.

    The investigators performed multiple analyses to confirm that there really is a loss of function in CFB, which can have a dramatic impact in the body.

    “In the case where you have this mutation that leads to a nonfunctional protein, you don’t get the normal signaling cascade, and the body doesn’t recognize the bacteria as being harmful, and thus those bacteria are not eliminated,” said co-senior author of the study Kathrin Michelsen, Ph.D., a research assistant professor of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at Cedars-Sinai. “So, for those patients who have perianal Crohn’s disease, there are connections that form from the rectum to the skin area. And those tunnels are full of bacteria that are not being eliminated.”

    Michelsen also noted the study demonstrates an important role for the alternative complement pathway and CFB in the development of perianal Crohn’s disease. The findings also suggest that targeting the alternative complement pathway may be a novel therapeutic approach for treating this disabling manifestation of Crohn’s disease.

    This genetic variant can also be associated with other diseases.

    “These genetic variants often predispose to more than one condition, and we believe this discovery potentially has ramifications for other diseases as well, not just Crohn’s disease,” said McGovern.

    Investigators are now working on identifying the function of additional genetic variants associated with perianal Crohn’s disease and other areas of unmet medical needs in the inflammatory bowel diseases.

    Reference: “Genetic coding variant in complement factor B (CFB) is associated with increased risk for perianal Crohn’s disease and leads to impaired CFB cleavage and phagocytosis” by Marzieh Akhlaghpour, Talin Haritunians, Shyam K More, Lisa S Thomas, Dalton T Stamps, Shishir Dube, Dalin Li, Shaohong Yang, Carol J Landers, Emebet Mengesha, Hussein Hamade, Ramachandran Murali, Alka A Potdar, Andrea J Wolf, Gregory J Botwin, Michelle Khrom, International IBD Genetics Consortium, Ashwin N Ananthakrishnan, William A Faubion, Bana Jabri, Sergio A Lira, Rodney D Newberry, Robert S Sandler, R Balfour Sartor, Ramnik J Xavier, Steven R Brant, Judy H Cho, Richard H Duerr, Mark G Lazarev, John D Rioux, L Philip Schumm, Mark S Silverberg, Karen Zaghiyan, Phillip Fleshner, Gil Y Melmed, Eric A Vasiliauskas, Christina Ha, Shervin Rabizadeh, Gaurav Syal, Nirupama N Bonthala, David A Ziring, Stephan R Targan, Millie D Long, Dermot P B McGovern and Kathrin S Michelsen, 20 April 2023, Gut.
    DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2023-329689

    The study was partially funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the F. Widjaja Foundation, the Leona M. And Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust, and the Fred L. Hartley Family Foundation.

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    1 Comment

    1. Rotting Corpse on April 26, 2023 8:32 pm

      It’s cause ur not eating enough fuc*ing fiber dumass

      Reply
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