The demonstration of a heterozygous missense mutation in the MDR3 gene in a patient with ICP with no known family history of PFIC, analysed by functional studies, is a novel finding.
Here, we report the characterization of wild type MDR3 and the Q1174E mutant, which was identified previously in a patient with progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 (PFIC-3).
Functional analysis of ABCB4 mutations relates clinical outcomes of progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 to the degree of MDR3 floppase activity.
Whereas rare mutations of this transporter were known to cause progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis, the genome-wide association studies in Iceland find the common ABCB4 variant c.711A>T to be a general risk factor for elevated aminotransferases and higher impact variants to be potential determinants of early-onset gallstone disease, cholestasis of pregnancy, liver cirrhosis, and hepatobiliary cancer.
Adenosine triphosphate-binding cassette, subfamily B, member 4 (ABCB4) gene alterations can cause two distinct clinical entities: progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 (PFIC3) and low phospholipid-associated cholelithiasis (LPAC).
Patients with this disease, Progressive Familial Intrahepatic Cholestasis (PFIC) type 3, have a mutation in the MDR3 gene, which is the human homologue of the murine Mdr2 gene.
Bile acid imbalance causes progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 2 (PFIC2) or type 3 (PFIC3), severe liver diseases associated with genetic defects in the biliary bile acid transporter bile salt export pump (BSEP; ABCB11) or phosphatidylcholine transporter multidrug resistance protein 3 (MDR3; ABCB4), respectively.
Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 (PFIC3) is a chronic autosomal recessive disorder characterized by a wide spectrum of clinical severity generally related to the degree of pathogenicity of the causal sequence variation in ABCB4 gene.
Progressive Familial Intrahepatic Cholestasis type 3 (PFIC3) is an autosomal-recessive liver disease due to mutations in the ABCB4 gene encoding for the MDR3 protein.
ABCB4 deficiency, due to genetic variations, is responsible for progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 (PFIC3) and other rare biliary diseases.
We report on NR1H4 analysis in eight patients with progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis (PFIC) and in eight women with either ICP and/or drug-induced cholestasis (DIC) in whom no disease causing mutation in ATP8B1, ABCB11 and/or ABCB4 were found.
The role of an ABCB4 gene defect in liver disease has been initially proven in a subtype of progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis called PFIC3, a severe pediatric liver disease that may require liver transplantation.
The wide clinical spectrum of the ABCB4 gene (ATP-binding cassette subfamily B member 4) deficiency syndromes in humans includes low phospholipid-associated cholelithiasis (LPAC), intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (ICP), oral contraceptives-induced cholestasis (CIC), and progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 (PFIC3).
Clinical features and genotype-phenotype correlations in children with progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 related to ABCB4 mutations.