JHEP Reports (Jan 2025)

Biliary atresia susceptibility gene EFEMP1 regulates extrahepatic bile duct elastic fiber formation and mechanics

  • Kapish Gupta,
  • Jessica Llewellyn,
  • Emilia Roberts,
  • Chengyang Liu,
  • Ali Naji,
  • Richard K. Assoian,
  • Rebecca G. Wells

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. 101215

Abstract

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Background & Aims: EGF-containing fibulin extracellular matrix protein 1 (EFEMP1, also called fibulin-3) is an extracellular matrix protein linked in a genome-wide association study to biliary atresia, a fibrotic disease of the neonatal extrahepatic bile duct. Fibulin-3 is deposited in most tissues and Efemp1 null mice have decreased elastic fibers in visceral fascia; however, fibulin-3 does not have a role in the development of large elastic fibers and its overall function in the extrahepatic bile ducts remains unclear. Methods: We used staining and histology to define the amount and organization of key extracellular matrix components in the extrahepatic bile ducts. We also repurposed pressure myography, a technique heretofore applied to the vasculature, to determine the contribution of elastin and fibulin-3 to extrahepatic bile duct mechanics. We examined extrahepatic bile duct structure and mechanics in three models: neonatal vs. adult rat ducts (n = 6 each), elastase-treated adult rat ducts (n = 6-7 each), and Efemp1+/- vs. wild-type mouse ducts (n = 6 each). Results: We demonstrated that fibulin-3 is expressed in the submucosa of both neonatal and adult mouse, rat and human extrahepatic bile ducts and that, in adult Efemp1+/- mouse ducts, elastin organization into fibers is decreased by approximately half. Pressure myography showed that Efemp1+/- ducts have altered mechanics compared to control ducts, with Efemp1+/- ducts displaying significant stretch compared to controls (p = 0.0376); these changes in stretch are similar to those observed in elastase-treated vs. normal ducts (p <0.0001) and in neonatal ducts vs. adult ducts (p <0.0001). Conclusion: Fibulin-3 has an important role in the formation of elastic fibers and the mechanical properties of the extrahepatic bile duct. This provides functional relevance for the biliary atresia susceptibility gene EFEMP1. Impact and implications:: The gene EFEMP1 was found via a genome-wide association study to be a susceptibility gene for the neonatal disease biliary atresia. EFEMP1 encodes the protein fibulin-3, which regulates elastic fiber organization in the extrahepatic bile duct (EHBD), the major site of disease in biliary atresia. We showed that neonatal EHBDs as well as mice heterozygous for Efemp1 have decreased numbers of elastic fibers, and that this alters EHBD mechanics. This work is important for understanding the mechanism of biliary atresia, in particular susceptibility to obstruction.

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