GINOP - STAY ALIVE(GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00048) Támogató: Nemzeti Kutatási, Fejlesztési
és Innovációs Hivatal
(PD116553)
Modern orvostudományi diagnosztikus eljárások és terápiák fejlesztése transzlációs
megközelítésbe...(EFOP-3.6.2-16-2017-00006) Támogató: EFOP
(BO/00569/17) Támogató: MTA Bolyai pályázat
(LP2017–18/2017)
(Hungary grant 20391-3/2018/FEKUSTRAT) Támogató: EMMI
(TUDFO/47138-1/2019/ITM)
(TKP2021-EGA-28)
(ÚNKP-21-4-SZTE-1116)
(ÚNKP-21-3-SZTE-68)
Albert Szent-Györgyi Research Grant(5S 470 (A202))
(739593) Támogató: Horizon 2020
(NTP-NFTÖ-B-0011)
(NTP-NFTÖ-21-B-0205)
(NTP-NFTÖ-21-B-0079)
Szakterületek:
Gasztroenterológia és hepatológia
Orvos- és egészségtudomány
Alcoholic pancreatitis and hepatitis are frequent, potentially lethal diseases with
limited treatment options. Our previous study reported that the expression of CFTR
Cl- channel is impaired by ethanol in pancreatic ductal cells leading to more severe
alcohol-induced pancreatitis. In addition to determining epithelial ion secretion,
CFTR has multiple interactions with other proteins, which may influence intracellular
Ca2+ signaling. Thus, we aimed to investigate the impact of ethanol-mediated CFTR
damage on intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis in pancreatic ductal epithelial cells and
cholangiocytes. Human and mouse pancreas and liver samples and organoids were used
to study ion secretion, intracellular signaling, protein expression and interaction.
The effect of PMCA4 inhibition was analyzed in a mouse model of alcohol-induced pancreatitis.
The decreased CFTR expression impaired PMCA function and resulted in sustained intracellular
Ca2+ elevation in ethanol-treated and mouse and human pancreatic organoids. Liver
samples derived from alcoholic hepatitis patients and ethanol-treated mouse liver
organoids showed decreased CFTR expression and function, and impaired PMCA4 activity.
PMCA4 co-localizes and physically interacts with CFTR on the apical membrane of polarized
epithelial cells, where CFTR-dependent calmodulin recruitment determines PMCA4 activity.
The sustained intracellular Ca2+ elevation in the absence of CFTR inhibited mitochondrial
function and was accompanied with increased apoptosis in pancreatic epithelial cells
and PMCA4 inhibition increased the severity of alcohol-induced AP in mice. Our results
suggest that improving Ca2+ extrusion in epithelial cells may be a potential novel
therapeutic approach to protect the exocrine pancreatic function in alcoholic pancreatitis
and prevent the development of cholestasis in alcoholic hepatitis.