Functional variation in human CAZyme genes in relation to the efficacy of a carbohydrate-restricted diet in IBS patients.

Authors

Andreea Zamfir-Taranu, Britt-Sabina Löscher, Florencia Carbone, Abdullah Hoter, Cristina Esteban Blanco, Isotta Bozzarelli, Leire Torices, Karen Routhiaux, Karen Van den Houte, Ferdinando Bonfiglio, Gabriele Mayr, Maura Corsetti, Hassan Y Naim, Andre Franke, Jan Tack, Mauro D’Amato

Year of publication

2024

Journal

CLIN GASTROENTEROL H

Volume

-

Issue

-

ISSN

1542-3565

Impact factor

12.6

Abstract

Background and aims

Limiting the dietary intake of certain carbohydrates has therapeutic effects in some but not all irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients. We investigated genetic variation in human Carbohydrate-Active enZYmes (hCAZymes) genes in relation to the response to a FODMAP-lowering diet in the DOMINO study.

Methods

HCAZy polymorphism was studied in IBS patients from the dietary (FODMAP-lowering; N=196) and medication (otilonium bromide; N=54) arms of the DOMINO trial via targeted sequencing of 6 genes of interest (AMY2B, LCT, MGAM, MGAM2, SI and TREH). hCAZyme defective (hypomorphic) variants were identified via computational annotation using clinical pathogenicity classifiers. Age- and sex-adjusted logistic regression was used to test hCAZyme polymorphisms in cumulative analyses where IBS patients were stratified into carrier and non-carrier groups (collapsing all hCAZyme hypomorphic variants into a single bin). Quantitative analysis of hCAZyme variation was also performed, in which the number of hCAZyme genes affected by a hypomorphic variant was taken into account.

Results

In the dietary arm, the number of hypomorphic hCAZyme genes positively correlated with treatment response rate (P=.03, OR=1.51 [CI=0.99-2.32]). In the IBS-D group (N=55), hCAZyme carriers were six times more likely to respond to the diet than non-carriers (P=.002, OR=6.33 [CI=1.83-24.77]). These trends were not observed in the medication arm.

Conclusions

HCAZYme genetic variation may be relevant to the efficacy of a carbohydrate-lowering diet. This warrants additional testing and replication of findings, including mechanistic investigations of this phenomenon.