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Intestinal current measurement and nasal potential difference to make a diagnosis of cases with inconclusive CFTR genetics and sweat test.

Rebecca MinsoAngela SchulzChristian DopferNadine AlfeisAndrea van BarneveldLena Makartian-GyulumyanGesine HansenSibylle JungeCarsten MüllerFelix C C RingshausenAnnette Sauer-HeilbornFrauke StankeCornelia StolpeStephanie TammTobias WelteAnna-Maria DittrichBurkhard Tümmler
Published in: BMJ open respiratory research (2021)
The majority of patients whom we diagnosed with CF or CFTR-RD by extended electrophysiology are carriers of the wild-type CFTR coding sequence on at least one of their CF alleles. The disease-causing genetic lesions should reside in the non-coding region of CFTR or elsewhere in the genome, affecting the regulation of CFTR expression in a tissue-depending fashion which may explain the large within-group variability of CFTR activity in the respiratory and intestinal epithelium seen in this group.
Keyphrases
  • cystic fibrosis
  • end stage renal disease
  • wild type
  • genome wide
  • chronic kidney disease
  • ejection fraction
  • peritoneal dialysis
  • gene expression
  • climate change
  • binding protein