Fol. Biol. 2010, 56, 9-13

https://doi.org/10.14712/fb2010056010009

Role of Common Canalicular Transporter Gene Variations in Aetiology of Idiopathic Gallstones in Childhood

J. Bronský1, Milan Jirsa2, J. Nevoral1, M. Hřebíček3

1Second Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Motol, Department of Paediatrics, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic
2First Faculty of Medicine, Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic
3First Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Inherited Metabolic Diseases, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic

Received March 2009
Accepted May 2009

Variations in genes encoding canalicular transportes, for biliary lipids may affect concentrations of biliary lipids in bile and promote cholesterol crystallization and gallstone formation. In our study we investigated the contribution of heterozygosity for common variations considered either potentially pathogenic or susceptibility alleles for cholesterol cholelithiasis in adults (c.523A>G (p.Thr175Ala) and c.1954A>G (p.Arg652Gly) in ABCB4, c.1331T>C (p.Val444Ala) in ABCB11 and c.55 G>C (p.Asp19His) in ABCG8) to the aetiology of paediatric idiopathic gallstone disease. Genotyping was performed in 35 paediatric subjects with idiopathic gallstones with positive family history for gallstones and 150 population controls. The ABCB4 variant p.Thr175Ala was found only in the controls, not in the patients. The frequency of the remaining three variant alleles and the corresponding genotypes did not differ between patients and controls. We conclude that the studied common variations in genes encoding canalicular transporters known to contribute to genetic predisposition to cholesterol gallstones in adulthood do not contribute specifically to the aetiology of paediatric idiopathic gallstones.

Funding

This study was supported by grant NR/9079-3 from the Ministry of Health of the Czech Republic.

References

16 live references