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A frequent CYP2D6 variant promotes skipping of exon 3 and reduces CYP2D6 protein expression in human liver samples

Affiliation
Department of Pharmacotherapy and Translational Research ,Center for Pharmacogenomics ,College of Pharmacy ,University of Florida ,Gainesville ,FL ,United States
Collins, Joseph M.;
Affiliation
Department of Pharmacotherapy and Translational Research ,Center for Pharmacogenomics ,College of Pharmacy ,University of Florida ,Gainesville ,FL ,United States
Lester, Hannah;
Affiliation
Department of Pharmacotherapy and Translational Research ,Center for Pharmacogenomics ,College of Pharmacy ,University of Florida ,Gainesville ,FL ,United States
Shabnaz, Samia;
Affiliation
Department of Pharmacotherapy and Translational Research ,Center for Pharmacogenomics ,College of Pharmacy ,University of Florida ,Gainesville ,FL ,United States
Wang, Danxin

CYP2D6 is one of the most polymorphic drug-metabolizing enzymes in the liver. While genetic CYP2D6 variants serve as clinical biomarkers to predict CYP2D6 activity, large inter-person variability in CYP2D6 expression remains unaccounted for. Previous results suggest that there is variable expression of a CYP2D6 splice isoform with an in-frame deletion of exon 3 (CYP2D6ΔE3) encoding a protein lacking numerous active site residues. Here, using fragment analysis and RT-qPCR, we revealed that rs1058164 G (MAF = 27%–43%) is associated with increased formation of CYP2D6∆E3 in human liver samples (1.4–2.5-fold) and transfected cells. Furthermore, western blots showed that rs1058164 G was associated with a 50% decrease in full-length hepatic CYP2D6 protein expression. In addition, by studying a larger liver cohort, we confirmed our previous results that rs16947 (CYP2D6*2) reduces full-length CYP2D6 mRNA by increasing the production of an unstable splice isoform lacking exon 6 (CYP2D6ΔE6) and that the impact of CYP2D6ΔE6 is offset in carriers of the downstream enhancer variant rs5758550. The three frequent SNPs (rs1058164, rs16947, and rs5758550) form various 3-SNP-haplotypes, each with distinct CYP2D6 expression characteristics. Using an expression score (ES) system, we tested the impact of the 3-SNP-haplotype on improving the standard model to predict hepatic CYP2D6 protein expression based on genotype. A model that incorporates the 3-SNP-haplotype provided the best fit for CYP2D6 expression and also accounted for more variability in CYP2D6 protein levels (59%) than a model based on the accepted standard (36%) or one that only adds rs16947 and rs5758550 (42%). Clinical studies are needed to determine whether including the 3-SNP-haplotype alongside current standard CYP2D6 models improves the predictive value of CYP2D6 panels.

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License Holder: Copyright © 2023 Collins, Lester, Shabnaz and Wang.

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