Cargando…

Congenital aflatoxicosis, mal-detoxification genomics & ontogeny trigger immune-mediated Kotb disease biliary atresia variant: SANRA compliant review

Biliary atresia (BA) is the most common indication for pediatric liver transplantation. We describe The BA variant: Kotb disease. Liver tissue in the Kotb disease BA is massively damaged by congenital aflatoxicosis resulting in inflammation, adhesions, fibrosis, bile duct proliferation, scarring, ch...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kotb, Magd A., Kotb, Ahmed, Talaat, Sahar, Shehata, Sherif M., El Dessouki, Nabil, ElHaddad, Ahmed A., El Tagy, Gamal, Esmat, Haytham, Shehata, Sameh, Hashim, Mohamed, Kotb, Hanan A., Zekry, Hanan, Abd Elkader, Hesham M., Kaddah, Sherif, Abd El Baky, Hend E., Lotfi, Nabil
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9524989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36181129
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000030368
_version_ 1784800610726445056
author Kotb, Magd A.
Kotb, Ahmed
Talaat, Sahar
Shehata, Sherif M.
El Dessouki, Nabil
ElHaddad, Ahmed A.
El Tagy, Gamal
Esmat, Haytham
Shehata, Sameh
Hashim, Mohamed
Kotb, Hanan A.
Zekry, Hanan
Abd Elkader, Hesham M.
Kaddah, Sherif
Abd El Baky, Hend E.
Lotfi, Nabil
author_facet Kotb, Magd A.
Kotb, Ahmed
Talaat, Sahar
Shehata, Sherif M.
El Dessouki, Nabil
ElHaddad, Ahmed A.
El Tagy, Gamal
Esmat, Haytham
Shehata, Sameh
Hashim, Mohamed
Kotb, Hanan A.
Zekry, Hanan
Abd Elkader, Hesham M.
Kaddah, Sherif
Abd El Baky, Hend E.
Lotfi, Nabil
author_sort Kotb, Magd A.
collection PubMed
description Biliary atresia (BA) is the most common indication for pediatric liver transplantation. We describe The BA variant: Kotb disease. Liver tissue in the Kotb disease BA is massively damaged by congenital aflatoxicosis resulting in inflammation, adhesions, fibrosis, bile duct proliferation, scarring, cholestasis, focal syncytial giant cell transformation, and typical immune response involving infiltration by CD4+, CD8+, CD68+, CD14+, neutrophil infiltration, neutrophil elastase spill, heavy loads of aflatoxin B1, accelerated cirrhosis, disruption of p53 and GSTPi, and have null glutathione S transferase M1 (GSTM1). All their mothers are heterozygous for GSTM1. This inability to detoxify aflatoxicosis results in progressive inflammatory adhesions and obliterative cholangiopathy early in life. The typical disruption of both p53 and GSTPi causes loss of fidelity of hepatic regeneration. Hence, regeneration in Kotb disease BA typically promotes accelerated cirrhosis. The immune response in Kotb disease BA is for damage control and initiation of regeneration, yet, this friendly fire incurs massive structural collateral damage. The Kotb disease BA is about actual ongoing hepatic entrapment of aflatoxins with lack of ability of safe disposal due to child detoxification-genomics disarray. The Kotb disease BA is a product of the interaction of persistent congenital aflatoxicosis, genetic lack of GSTM1 detoxification, ontogenically impaired activity of other hepatic detoxification, massive neutrophil-elastase, immune-induced damage, and disturbed regeneration. Ante-natal and neonatal screening for aflatoxicosis, avoiding cord milking, and stringent control of aflatoxicosis content of human, poultry and live-stock feeds might prove effective for prevention, prompt diagnosis and management based on our recent understanding of its patho-genomics.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9524989
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-95249892022-10-03 Congenital aflatoxicosis, mal-detoxification genomics & ontogeny trigger immune-mediated Kotb disease biliary atresia variant: SANRA compliant review Kotb, Magd A. Kotb, Ahmed Talaat, Sahar Shehata, Sherif M. El Dessouki, Nabil ElHaddad, Ahmed A. El Tagy, Gamal Esmat, Haytham Shehata, Sameh Hashim, Mohamed Kotb, Hanan A. Zekry, Hanan Abd Elkader, Hesham M. Kaddah, Sherif Abd El Baky, Hend E. Lotfi, Nabil Medicine (Baltimore) Research Article Biliary atresia (BA) is the most common indication for pediatric liver transplantation. We describe The BA variant: Kotb disease. Liver tissue in the Kotb disease BA is massively damaged by congenital aflatoxicosis resulting in inflammation, adhesions, fibrosis, bile duct proliferation, scarring, cholestasis, focal syncytial giant cell transformation, and typical immune response involving infiltration by CD4+, CD8+, CD68+, CD14+, neutrophil infiltration, neutrophil elastase spill, heavy loads of aflatoxin B1, accelerated cirrhosis, disruption of p53 and GSTPi, and have null glutathione S transferase M1 (GSTM1). All their mothers are heterozygous for GSTM1. This inability to detoxify aflatoxicosis results in progressive inflammatory adhesions and obliterative cholangiopathy early in life. The typical disruption of both p53 and GSTPi causes loss of fidelity of hepatic regeneration. Hence, regeneration in Kotb disease BA typically promotes accelerated cirrhosis. The immune response in Kotb disease BA is for damage control and initiation of regeneration, yet, this friendly fire incurs massive structural collateral damage. The Kotb disease BA is about actual ongoing hepatic entrapment of aflatoxins with lack of ability of safe disposal due to child detoxification-genomics disarray. The Kotb disease BA is a product of the interaction of persistent congenital aflatoxicosis, genetic lack of GSTM1 detoxification, ontogenically impaired activity of other hepatic detoxification, massive neutrophil-elastase, immune-induced damage, and disturbed regeneration. Ante-natal and neonatal screening for aflatoxicosis, avoiding cord milking, and stringent control of aflatoxicosis content of human, poultry and live-stock feeds might prove effective for prevention, prompt diagnosis and management based on our recent understanding of its patho-genomics. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2022-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9524989/ /pubmed/36181129 http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000030368 Text en Copyright © 2022 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CCBY) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kotb, Magd A.
Kotb, Ahmed
Talaat, Sahar
Shehata, Sherif M.
El Dessouki, Nabil
ElHaddad, Ahmed A.
El Tagy, Gamal
Esmat, Haytham
Shehata, Sameh
Hashim, Mohamed
Kotb, Hanan A.
Zekry, Hanan
Abd Elkader, Hesham M.
Kaddah, Sherif
Abd El Baky, Hend E.
Lotfi, Nabil
Congenital aflatoxicosis, mal-detoxification genomics & ontogeny trigger immune-mediated Kotb disease biliary atresia variant: SANRA compliant review
title Congenital aflatoxicosis, mal-detoxification genomics & ontogeny trigger immune-mediated Kotb disease biliary atresia variant: SANRA compliant review
title_full Congenital aflatoxicosis, mal-detoxification genomics & ontogeny trigger immune-mediated Kotb disease biliary atresia variant: SANRA compliant review
title_fullStr Congenital aflatoxicosis, mal-detoxification genomics & ontogeny trigger immune-mediated Kotb disease biliary atresia variant: SANRA compliant review
title_full_unstemmed Congenital aflatoxicosis, mal-detoxification genomics & ontogeny trigger immune-mediated Kotb disease biliary atresia variant: SANRA compliant review
title_short Congenital aflatoxicosis, mal-detoxification genomics & ontogeny trigger immune-mediated Kotb disease biliary atresia variant: SANRA compliant review
title_sort congenital aflatoxicosis, mal-detoxification genomics & ontogeny trigger immune-mediated kotb disease biliary atresia variant: sanra compliant review
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9524989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36181129
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000030368
work_keys_str_mv AT kotbmagda congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT kotbahmed congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT talaatsahar congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT shehatasherifm congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT eldessoukinabil congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT elhaddadahmeda congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT eltagygamal congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT esmathaytham congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT shehatasameh congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT hashimmohamed congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT kotbhanana congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT zekryhanan congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT abdelkaderheshamm congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT kaddahsherif congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT abdelbakyhende congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview
AT lotfinabil congenitalaflatoxicosismaldetoxificationgenomicsontogenytriggerimmunemediatedkotbdiseasebiliaryatresiavariantsanracompliantreview