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The CEL gene encodes carboxyl ester lipase, a pancreatic digestive enzyme. CEL is extremely polymorphic due to a variable number tandem repeat (VNTR) located in the last exon. Single-base deletions within this VNTR cause the inherited disorder MODY8, whereas little is known about VNTR single-base insertions in pancreatic disease. We therefore mapped CEL insertion variants (CEL-INS) in 200 Norwegian patients with pancreatic neoplastic disorders. Twenty-eight samples (14.0%) carried CEL-INS alleles. Most common were insertions in repeat 9 (9.5%), which always associated with a VNTR length of 13 repeats. The combined INS allele frequency (0.078) was similar to that observed in a control material of 416 subjects (0.075). We performed functional testing in HEK293T cells of a set of CEL-INS variants, in which the insertion site varied from the first to the 12th VNTR repeat. Lipase activity showed little difference among the variants. However, CEL-INS variants with insertions occurring in the most proximal repeats led to protein aggregation and endoplasmic reticulum stress, which upregulated the unfolded protein response. Moreover, by using a CEL-INS-specific antibody, we observed patchy signals in pancreatic tissue from humans without any CEL-INS variant in the germline. Similar pancreatic staining was seen in knock-in mice expressing the most common human CEL VNTR with 16 repeats. CEL-INS proteins may therefore be constantly produced from somatic events in the normal pancreatic parenchyma. This observation along with the high population frequency of CEL-INS alleles strongly suggests that these variants are benign, with a possible exception for insertions in VNTR repeats 1-4.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddae034 | DOI Listing |
Int J Mol Sci
August 2025
Scientific Center of Genetics and Life Sciences, Sirius University of Science and Technology, Sirius 354340, Russia.
Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are central to food, feed, and health biotechnology, yet their genomes have long resisted rapid, precise manipulation. This review charts the evolution of LAB genome-editing strategies from labor-intensive RecA-dependent double-crossovers to state-of-the-art CRISPR and CRISPR-associated transposase systems. Native homologous recombination, transposon mutagenesis, and phage-derived recombineering opened the door to targeted gene disruption, but low efficiencies and marker footprints limited throughput.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDNA Repair (Amst)
August 2025
Department of Quantum-Applied Biosciences, Takasaki Institute for Advanced Quantum Science, National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology, Takasaki 370-1292, Japan. Electronic address:
We previously showed that moss (Physcomitrium patens) cells are highly radioresistant and suggested that P. patens uses an efficient mechanism to repair DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Homologous recombination (HR), canonical non-homologous end-joining, and alternative end-joining are the major pathways used to repair DSBs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleic Acids Res
July 2025
Laboratory of Genome Stability and Structural Biology, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709, United States.
DNA synthesis during genomic replication generates mismatches that lead to mutations. Point mutations may be caused by base-base mismatches that yields base substitutions or by primer- or template-strand slippage, which yield insertions and deletions (indels), respectively. Evidence obtained 40 years ago with DNA polymerases in vitro indicated that transient DNA intermediates also initiate substitutions and indels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Rev Clin Oncol
July 2025
Division of Solid Tumour Oncology, Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan Kettering, New York, NY, USA.
DNA mismatch repair (MMR) is one of many evolutionarily conserved processes that act as guardians of genomic integrity. MMR proteins recognize errors that occur during DNA replication and initiate countermeasures to rectify those mistakes. MMR deficiency (MMRd) therefore leads to a dramatic accumulation of mutations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
July 2025
Cancer Registry of Norway, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway.
Accurate detection of low-frequency mutations is crucial for understanding viral evolution and tumorigenesis in humans, but is often confounded by technical artifacts introduced during library preparation and sequencing. We present GENOMICON-Seq, an end-to-end simulation tool that models both amplicon and whole exome sequencing (WES) workflows with realistic biological mutations and technical noise. GENOMICON-Seq inserts ground truth mutations, ranging from APOBEC3-like edits to COSMIC single base substitution signatures, before subjecting samples to simulated PCR errors, probe-capture enrichment, and Illumina-specific sequencing biases.
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