Abstract
AbstractEGF-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 fibro-inflammatory disease of the neonatal extrahepatic bile duct. EFEMP1 is expressed in most tissues and Efemp1 null mice have decreased elastic fibers in visceral fascia; however, in contrast to other short fibulins (fibulins 4 and 5), EFEMP1 does not have a role in the development of large elastic fibers, and its overall function remains unclear. We demonstrated that EFEMP1 is expressed in the submucosa of both neonatal and adult mouse and human extrahepatic bile ducts and that, in adult Efemp1+/- mice, elastin organization into fibers is decreased. We used pressure myography, a technique developed to study the mechanics of the vasculature, to show that Efemp1+/- extrahepatic bile ducts are more compliant to luminal pressure, leading to increased circumferential stretch. We conclude that EFEMP1 has an important role in the formation of elastic fibers and mechanical properties of the extrahepatic bile duct. These data suggest that altered expression of EFEMP1 in the extrahepatic bile duct leads to an abnormal response to mechanical stress such as obstruction, potentially explaining the role of EFEMP1 in biliary atresia.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory