Literature DB >> 15701167

Familial hypercholesterolemia in St-Petersburg: the known and novel mutations found in the low density lipoprotein receptor gene in Russia.

Faina M Zakharova1, Dorte Damgaard, Michail Y Mandelshtam, Valery I Golubkov, Peter H Nissen, Gitte G Nilsen, Anette Stenderup, Boris M Lipovetsky, Vladimir O Konstantinov, Alexander D Denisenko, Vadim B Vasilyev, Ole Faergeman.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Familial hypercholesterolemia is a human monogenic disease caused by population-specific mutations in the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor gene. Despite thirteen different mutations of the LDL receptor gene were reported from Russia prior to 2003, the whole spectrum of disease-causing gene alterations in this country is poorly known and requires further investigation provided by the current study.
METHODS: Forty-five patients with clinical diagnosis of FH were tested for the apolipoprotein B (apoB) mutation R3500Q by restriction fragment length analysis. After exclusion of R3500Q mutation high-sensitive fluorescent single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis and automatic DNA sequencing were used to search for mutations in the LDL receptor gene.
RESULTS: We found twenty one rare sequence variations of the LDL receptor gene. Nineteen were probably pathogenic mutations, and two (P518P, T705I) were considered as neutral ones. Among the mutations likely to be pathogenic, eight were novel (c.670-671insG, C249X, c.936-940del5, c.1291-1331del41, W422X, c.1855-1856insA, D601N, C646S), and eleven (Q12X, IVS3+1G>A, c.651-653del3, E207X, c.925-931del7, C308Y, L380H, c.1302delG, IVS9+1G>A, V776M, V806I) have already been described in other populations. None of the patients had the R3500Q mutation in the apoB gene.
CONCLUSIONS: Nineteen pathogenic mutations in the LDL receptor gene in 23 probands were identified. Two mutations c.925-931del7 and L380H are shared by St.-Petersburg population with neighbouring Finland and several other mutations with Norway, Sweden or Denmark, i.e. countries from the Baltic Sea region. Only four mutations (c.313+1G>A, c.651-653del3, C308Y and W422X) were recurrent as all those were found in two unrelated families. By this study the number of known mutations in the LDL receptor gene in St.-Petersburg area was increased nearly threefold. Analysis of all 34 low density lipoprotein receptor gene mutations found in St.-Petersburg argues against strong founder effect in Russian familial hypercholesterolemia.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15701167      PMCID: PMC551615          DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-6-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Med Genet        ISSN: 1471-2350            Impact factor:   2.103


Background

Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) (OMIM #143890) is one of the most common monogenic human diseases. It is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait with the prevalence of the heterozygous form conventionally considered to be about 1 of 500 in most populations [1]. Elevated blood serum cholesterol is due to impaired removal of low-density lipoproteins (LDL) from blood by LDL receptors, and it is associated with early onset coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction. Impairment of LDL receptor function usually results either from the absence or deficiency of the LDL receptor (OMIM *606945) itself or from a common mutation (R3500Q) in the gene of the receptor's ligand, apolipoprotein B (OMIM +107730) causing type B of the autosomal dominant hypercholesterolemia (OMIM #144010) [2]. Furthermore, a third type of monogenic autosomal dominant hypercholesterolemia (OMIM #603776) is due to the recently discovered defects in the proprotein convertase PCSK9 gene (OMIM *607786) [3]. A form of recessively inherited hypercholesterolemia (OMIM #603813) has a prevalence of less than 1:10 000000 and is due to defects in the LDL receptor adaptive protein ARH (OMIM *605747) [4,5]. Even though many forms of monogenic hypercholesterolemia are known, only apoB gene and LDL receptor gene variations seem to contribute significantly to the CHD morbidity in most populations [6]. The spectrum of LDL receptor mutations varies between different human populations and more than 900 mutations in the LDL receptor gene have been characterized worldwide [7-9]. A recent review [9] shows a clear difference in the LDL receptor gene mutations spectra for Western European countries, but this review gives nearly no data on the genetics of FH in the Eastern European countries and Russia. However, many mutations were described from Poland [10] and Bulgaria [11] and already thirteen different LDL receptor gene mutations have been published from the Russian population prior to 2003 [12]. In the present research we expand the study of the molecular genetic basis for FH in St.-Petersburg known to be the most well studied region of Russia in respect to FH-causing mutations and report 21 mutations, previously unknown in Russia.

Methods

Patients

Patients with FH were recruited from two lipid clinics of St.-Petersburg, namely Institute of Human Brain and Institute of Experimental Medicine. The clinical diagnosis of familial hypercholesterolemia was based on the following criteria: highly elevated plasma total cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol, presence of tendon xanthomata, corneal arcus or both, and positive family history of myocardial infarction and hypercholesterolemia with at least one first-degree relative affected. Forty-five probands fulfilling at least two of three criteria listed above were selected for the study. Full data of patients including their lipid data are given in the Discussion section (see Table 2). Informed consent was obtained in each case for DNA testing procedures.
Table 2

Clinical features of St. Petersburg patients recruited for search of mutations in the LDL receptor gene

Patients IDSexAgeTC, mg/dlTG, mg/dlLDLC, mg/dlHDLC, mg/dlXanthomas/Corneal arcusCHDCIMutation nameAll exons sequencing
1F6144917838627+++V776M-
2F5867530557242++-T705I-
3M603508128450++-FsV409: S423X-
4F4932620324837-+---
5F3641420132153+--V806I-
6M6840419233333++---
7F7652216144446-----
8F5444616535360-----
9F52500NDNDND-++--
10F6237012030343+--C308Y-
11F6635914130031-+---
12F6648629639136-++Q12X-
13F5246922838934++-IVS9+1G>A-
14F5332510128619-++--
15F5844619233474-+-FsK202: S205X-
16F3839826031432+--FsE291: N309X-
17M4628011722037-++--
18F5851917944637-+-G197del-
19F5436413530037+++FsE287: V348X-
20F5320423313523-++++--
21M6135011628047-----
22F4836922129035-+---
23M4841719035330-+-C249X-
24F4529912222946+--IVS3+1G>A-
25F5035310129538+--FsE414: M429X-
26F4555821047838+++--
27M6246913639844++++G197del+
28F891517985029+---+
29F403677328369-+-W422X+
30F6048010439366----+
31M4131424722639-++-+
32M3734429226224+++-+
33F5236074417932+++-+
34M403127025840++++-+
35M292537919542---E207X+
36M3852016844739+++D601N+
37F1944715636254---L380H+
38F633478426664+++C646S+
39F5643210637437++-W422X+
40M4754022644649+++IVS3+1G>A+
41F7043312337038-++-+
42M34534NDNDND+++-+
43F5265411557358+++C308Y+
44M5235633426029-++-+
45M5236016928739+++FsV597: A622X+

Footnote: TC – total blood serum cholesterol, TG – triglycerides, LDLC – low density lipoprotein cholesterol, HDLC – high density lipoprotein cholesterol, CHD – coronary heart disease, CI – coronary infarction. Pluses in the CI column indicate number of CI survived. Minus in the right column indicates that the patient's LDL receptor gene was studied by high-sensitive fluorescent SSCP-analysis and not by frontal sequencing of all LDL receptor gene exons; the latter condition is indicated by plus.

Biochemical procedures

Genomic DNA was extracted from blood white cells using a standard method [13]. The patients were initially tested for the apoB mutation R3500Q by restriction fragment length analysis [14]. Exons of the LDL receptor gene were then amplified [15], and PCR products were subjected to gel-electrophoresis followed by ethidium bromide or silver staining of DNA to exclude non-specific amplification. Single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis was performed in an ABI 377 DNA Sequencer (PE-Applied Biosystems) sequencing device using 4,25% non-denaturing MDE polyacrylamide gels (Cambrex) at 20°C. The gels were run under two different conditions, i.e. standard MDE gel or with the addition of 5% glycerol to the MDE gel. Automated DNA sequencing was performed in part in the ABI 377 DNA Sequencer (PE-Applied Biosystems), in part in an ALFExpress-2 DNA sequencer (Amersham Life Sciences), using primers for routine PCR DNA amplification. In the case of samples bearing the deletions, PCR products were cloned into a commercially available vector (TACLONE, Medigen, Novosibirsk) and sequenced using universal and reverse primers.

Results

None of the 45 patients had the apoB R3500Q mutation, whereas 25 patients had mutations in the LDL receptor gene. Large genomic rearrangements in the LDL receptor gene were previously shown to be an uncommon cause of FH in St.-Petersburg [16] and had been excluded in most patients of the current group. Therefore we restricted our search to point mutations and to minor deletions and insertions. We identified 21 sequence variations (Table 1) of which two probably were not pathogenic (in the following considerations we give numbering of aminoacids in the LDL receptor according to Yamamoto's nomenclature, [17] ). The T705I mutation (known also as FH Paris-9) is not associated with elevated serum cholesterol [18], and the transition c.1617C>T (P518P) is synonymous. We consider the remaining 19 variations to be pathogenic. Eleven mutations have been described in other populations, but to our knowledge the remaining 8 mutations have not been described so far [7,8]. From two of these nucleotide substitutions (C249X and W422X) the stop codon arises, four are frame-shift mutations leading to premature stop codons (FsK202:S205X; FsK290:N309X; FsV409:S423X; FsV597:A622X), and two result in amino acid substitutions (D601N and C646S). Sequencing of the cloned mutant allele bearing the five-nucleotide deletion (c.936-940del5 or FsE291) is demonstrated on Fig. 1. Mutations c.313+1G>A, c.651-653del3, C308Y and W422X were found in two probands each.
Table 1

List of the LDL receptor gene mutations found in the current study

Mutation, systematic nameNucleotide changeExon/IntronRapid test methodOccurrence in other populations [7, 8]Number of families (patients) with the mutation
Missense-mutations

C308Yc.985 G>Aexon 7FblIChina2 (2)
L380H (FH Pori)c.1202 T>Aexon 9MnlIFinland1 (1)
D601Nc.1864 G>Aexon 13EcoRVNone (New)1 (2)
C646Sc.1999 T>Aexon 14SSCPNone (New)1 (1)
V776Mc.2389 G>Aexon 16SSCPChina (Hong-Kong), Cuba, South Africa (Afrikaners)1 (2)
V806I (FH New York-5)c.2479 G>Aexon 17The Netherlands, USA1 (1)

Nonsense-mutations

Q12X (FH Turkey/Milan-4)c.97 C>Texon 2MaeIItaly, France, Turkey1 (2)
E207X (FH Morocco)c.682 G>Texon 4MaeIChina, Germany, Korea, Morocco, Norway, Sweden, UK, USA1 (2)
C249Xc.810 C>Aexon 5DdeI, Fnu4HINone (New)1 (1)
W422Xc.1328 G>Aexon 9MaeINone (New)2 (3)

Splice site mutations

IVS3+1G>A (FH-Elverum/ Olbia)c.313+1G>Aintron 3SSCPAustria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Italy, Spain, Korea, Norway, The Netherlands, UK, Sweden, South Africa (black)2 (3)
IVS9+1G>Ac.1358+1G>Aintron 9AsuHPIThe Netherlands1 (1)

Frameshift mutations

FsK202: S205Xc.670-671insGexon 4SSCPNone (New)1 (2)
FsE287: V348X (FH North Karelia)c.925-931del7exon 6SSCPFinland, Sweden, USA1 (1)
FsE291: N309Xc.936-940del5exon 6SSCPNone (New)1 (1)
FsV409: S423Xc.1291-1331del41exon 9SizingNone (New)1 (3)
FsE414: M429Xc.1302delGexon 9SSCPGermany1 (1)
FsV597: A622Xc.1855-1856insAexon 13None (New)1 (1)

In-frame deletions

G197delc.651-653del3exon 4HAUK2 (2)

Neutral mutations

T705I (FH Paris-9)c.2177 C>Texon 15Denmark, France, The Netherlands, UK, USA etc.1 (1)

Silent mutations

P518Pc.1617 C>Texon 11None (New)1 (1)

Footnote: HA – heteroduplex analysis; SSCP – single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis. Numeration of nucleotides and aminoacids follows Yamamoto's nomenclature [17] and the letter c. before the number of nucleotide indicates that it was taken from cDNA sequence.

Figure 1

Sequencing of the cloned mutant allele bearing the five nucleotide deletion (c.936-940del5 or FsE291). The sequence of the normal allele is shown at the top. The nucleotides absent in the mutant allele are underlined. The sequence of the mutant allele is shown at the bottom.

Rapid tests were developed for most of the mutations and all of those were confirmed by using these methods (Table 1). Various detection methods, including heteroduplex analysis, restriction enzyme tests and SSCP for several mutations from the list are illustrated by Figures 2, 3. Cosegregation of the mutations and elevated blood serum cholesterol was demonstrated in seventeen families (see Fig. 2, 3 and Table 1). Totally the mutations were confirmed in 9 relatives and excluded in 27 members of the proband's families. Most important the diagnosis of FH was excluded in 9 and set in 2 children of probands before adulthood, i.e. prior to age 18. In these children mutation detection was of crucial importance to set the diagnosis and to suggest further life style.
Figure 2

Detection of mutation Q12X in the LDL receptor gene by means of . Transition c.97 C>T in exon 2 of the LDL receptor gene leads to appearance of the new Mae I restriction site (CTAG) in the patients with the mutation. Mae I restriction enzyme test enables to confirm the presence of mutation Q12X identified by DNA sequencing in the proband (12-1) and in her son (12-2) and to exclude presence of the mutation in other relatives of the proband, including daughter (12-4) and grandchildren (12-3 and 12-5). Lengths of DNA restriction fragment are given at the left in bp and *total blood serum cholesterol figures of the patients – at the bottom of the gel in mg/dl.

Figure 3

Detection of mutation c.1291-1331del41 (mutation FsV409:S423X) of the LDL receptor gene by means of PCR product sizing and heteroduplex analysis. Deletion of 41 nucleotides results in significant change (indicated by C) of molecular weight of the PCR-amplified LDL receptor gene exon 9 fragment and in formation of specific heteroduplexes (indicated by A). Letter B indicates the PCR product of normal size. Current gel supports the presence of c.1291-1331del41 mutation in two children (3-2, 3-3) of the proband (3-1) and absence of this mutation in his daughter and grandson (3–4, 3–5). *total blood serum cholesterol figures of the patients – at the bottom of the gel in mg/dl.

In case of the Q12X mutation, the c.97C>T transition leads to occurrence of a new Mae I restriction site (CTAG) in exon 2 that allows a simple detection of this mutation. Restriction enzyme test was performed for the proband and her 4 descendants (Fig. 2). The presence of the mutation was confirmed in the son of the proband and excluded in the daughter and two grandchildren. In some other mutations no restriction enzyme tests can be developed for their rapid detection. For example, it is true for the recurrent mutation IVS3+1G>A (c.313+1G>A) that was identified by means of SSCP and verified by sequencing in probands from two unrelated families. SSCP patterns on silver-stained gels differ strikingly in patients with and without the mutation. The presence of the mutation was confirmed in the son of the proband by SSCP. In heterozygotes a deletion of 41 nucleotides at c.1291-1331 in exon 9 (mutation FsV409:S423X) results in occurrence of specific heteroduplexes. Besides, a PCR fragment of smaller size as compared to the normal allele is revealed in silver-stained polyacrylamide gels (Fig. 3). This mutation was identified in the son and daughter of the proband and excluded in the second daughter and in her child (Fig. 3).

Discussion

Previously 13 mutations in the LDL receptor gene have been reported in FH patients residing in St.-Petersburg [12] (see Table 3). Eight of those have not been reported in other populations. Our study revealed 21 mutations in the LDL receptor gene, out of which only T705I was previously reported from St.-Petersburg [12]. Nineteen of those 21 mutations are likely to be pathogenic. We exclude P518P (CCC>CCT; c.1617 C>T) from the list of pathogenic mutations since the transition c.1617 C>T results neither in an amino acid substitution nor in appearance of the new consensus splicing sequences. P518P mutation was found in the proband with mutation C646S, but it was not clarified if the mutations were in cis- or trans- position. Also we consider the T705I variant not to be a primary cause of FH, since the I705 allele itself is not associated with elevated cholesterol level [18] and the probable hypercholesterolemic effect of this mutation may be due to its linkage with other pathogenic LDL receptor gene mutations. Indeed, a variation in intron 7 (c.1061-8T) of unclear functional significance was shown to be very tightly linked to the I705 allele [19,20]. We have not searched for this intronic variant in the LDL receptor in the patient with the T705I substitution.
Table 3

List of the LDL receptor gene mutations reported previously from St. Petersburg, Russia [12 and References therein]

Mutation, systematic nameNucleotide changeExon/IntronRapid test methodOccurrence in other populations [7, 8]Number of families (patients) with the mutation
Large rearrangements

delta 5kbLarge deletionexons 3-5Southern blotNone1 (2)

Missense-mutations

C127Wc.444 T>Gexon 4Mva INone1 (1)
G128G, A130P[c.447 T>C; c.451 G>C]exon 4Cac 8 I, Bsu R INone1 (1)
C139Gc.478 T>Gexon 4Msp INone1 (3)
C146Rc.499 T>Cexon 4Apa INone1 (3)
C188Yc.626 G>Aexon 4Rsa ICzech Republic1 (3)
G571Ec.1775 G>Aexon 12SSCPItaly, Germany, Poland, Czech Republic, Austria, Belgium, Greece1 (1)

Nonsense-mutations

C74Xc.285 C>Aexon 3DdeIKorea, Northern Japan1 (1)
E397Xc.1252 C>Texon 9Alu INone1 (7)

In-frame deletions

347delGCCc.347-349delexon 4HA, Fnu4HINone1 (1)
G197delc.652-654delexon 4HAIsrael, USA, UK, Poland, Czech Republic, Germany, South Africa, The Netherlands7 (14)

Neutral mutations

T705I (FH Paris-9)c.2177 C>Texon 15Denmark, France, The Netherlands, UK, USA etc.1 (1)

Silent mutations

H229Hc.750 C>Texon 5Nco INone (New)1 (1)

Footnote: HA – heteroduplex analysis; SSCP – single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis. Numeration of nucleotides and aminoacids follows Yamamoto's nomenclature [17] and the letter c. before the number of nucleotide indicates that it was taken from cDNA sequence.

Among pathogenic mutations reported here, eleven have been described in other populations (Table 1) [7,8], and eight are novel. Six of the novel mutations lead to premature stop codons and result in truncated protein chains that probably lose their function. One out of these truncating mutations (c.936-940del5 or FsE291) also changes invariant nucleotides nearby exon-intron junction and thus may affect splicing. The D601N missense mutation, causing substitution of aspartic acid by asparagine has not been reported before. It seems likely that such a substitution might cause the loss of function since one other mutation in the same codon (D601Y) was described in familial hypercholesterolemia subjects [7]. The C646S also has not been reported before, but 5 other mutations affecting this codon have been described, one of which, C646Y (FH French Canadian-2), results in a transport defective protein (mutation class 2A) [21]. We, therefore, find it very likely that the C646S mutation is also pathogenic, but expression studies are needed to justify the effect of both missense mutations D601N and C646S. Previously described mutations were considered to be pathogenic due mostly to their listing in FH mutation databases even though functional studies were not systematically performed. Indeed, V806I mutation (known as variant FH New York -5) [22] occurs in the LDL receptor internalization signal NPVY, for which the consensus sequence NPxY is given (where X is not a conserved aminoacid) [23] and thus the substitution of isoleucin for valine may be not crucial for the LDL receptor function. The V776M mutation may have effect on LDL receptor mRNA splicing rather than to be realized on the protein level since the V776M mutation changes the invariant G at the 3' end of exon 16. However, this mutation is likely to be pathogenic since it was reported already in patients from La Habana, Cuba [24]. The apoB R3500Q mutation was not detected in any of our patients. This finding is in agreement with the previous observation that the R3500Q mutation had not been found in St.-Petersburg [25]. The mutation has been detected in another part of Russia only in 2 of 71 patients with symptoms of familial hypercholesterolemia [26]. The apoB R3500Q mutation is almost exclusively found in Caucasian individuals, and almost all subjects with the mutation carry the same haplotype. One of the highest frequencies of the mutation has been found in the Swiss population (approximately 1/200) [27], and Miserez and Muller [27] hypothesized that the mutation may have arisen in Switzerland 10,000 – 6,000 years ago. The prevalence of the mutation declines with increasing distance from the Central Europe [27,28], and the prevalence of the apoB R3500Q mutation is therefore expected to be low in the St.-Petersburg area (< 1/1000). A precise estimate would require a random sampling of the general population. Mutations in LDL receptor gene typical for various ethnic groups were revealed in St.-Petersburg (Table 1). In particular, several mutations found in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden are present in the St.-Petersburg population. The ethnic origin of these families is unclear and according to questioning and family names no evidence of a Scandinavian origin of probands was obtained. Only exception from our previous FH group was the proband with the E207X mutation who stated his German roots and indeed this mutation was previously reported from several families from Germany [29]. Interestingly, no specific Slavic or Eastern-European founder mutations were found in St.-Petersburg when comparing the LDL receptor mutation spectrum of Russia to those of Poland [10], Bulgaria [11] or Czech Republic [30,31]. G571E was found in Russia, Czech Republic and Poland but this mutation was also reported from many other countries worldwide. The C188Y mutation found in Russia [32] and in Czech Republic [30,31] cannot be considered a founder Slavic mutation, since it was reported from unique families in each country. Only one candidate for a Russian founder mutation is C139G identified in four unrelated families in different regions of the country, but this mutation is absent in related nations of the Eastern Europe as well as in other countries in the world. In our study we were able to find LDL receptor gene pathogenic mutations in 23 of 45 patients. Many methods are considered to be superior to routine isotopic SSCP when screening for mutations in DNA (see e.g. [33]for comparison of SSCP and DHPLC). However, we believe that mutations could have been overlooked due to intrinsic limitations of SSCP method in our hands only in few cases. Fluorescent SSCP, used in the current study, can be superior even to DHPLC and is a sensitive method for mutation screening, especially when different gel electrophoresis conditions are applied [34]. Recent studies indicate, that SSCP run under two different conditions detect up to 96% of heterozygous variations (P.H. Nissen, unpublished results). In our study LDL receptor gene mutations were found in 56% (14 out of 26) patients selected by SSCP and in 53% (10 out of 19) patients which DNA was subjected to direct sequencing of all gene exons (Table 2). We do not find it likely that many patients are underdiagnosed due to presence of large genomic rearrangements. In a study conducted in St.-Petersburg, in the partly overlapping sample of FH patients, only one case of a large deletion was found in the sample of 50 probands, giving the rough estimate of genomic rearrangements 2% [16]. In fact in mixed populations (such as that of that of St. Petersburg) the contribution of large rearrangements to the spectrum of pathogenic mutations seems to vary from 6% in Great Britain [35] to 2.5% in English-speaking Canadians [36]. More important, some of intronic mutations leading to defects of splicing could be missed, since the design of primers [15] mostly following recommendations of Hobbs et al. [22] with the only exclusion for primers to amplify exon 3 allowed analyzing only 14 out of 34 intron-exon boundaries in the LDL receptor gene. Recent investigation [37] demonstrated that a high percent of previously missed LDL receptor mutations may be localized in introns. In the cited study [37] in the patient sample after modifying the gene analysis procedure nearly 27% of patients turned out to have intronic mutations, despite the functional significance of these mutations have still to be validated. In the apoB gene we only looked for the R3500Q mutation, and the possibility that other mutations in that gene are responsible for hyperlipidemia cannot be ruled out. This possibility is unlikely, since the apoB gene has been studied extensively in other laboratories and no other pathogenic variants have been determined. To conclude we cannot definitely rule out the possibility that some undiscovered mutations in the LDL receptor gene have not been found. However, the possibility that the patients have mutations in a different gene involved in FH still remains since the mutation in the PCSK9 gene [3] were not tested in this study. With the two exceptions, mutations previously reported from Russia [12,38] have been confined to a single family. The exceptions were the mutations G197del (FH-Lithuania), found in high percent of Ashkenazi Jewish families with FH from St.-Petersburg [39], and the C139G mutation found in two Slavic families from St.-Petersburg [40,12], one family in Novosibirsk [38] and one family in Moscow [41]. In this study 4 mutations, namely c.313+1G>A, c.651-653del3, C308Y and W422X were found in two unrelated families. Together with the previous findings we discovered 34 mutations in the LDL receptor gene in St. Petersburg of which only six were detected in more than one family. Fourteen LDL receptor gene mutations were discovered by the other Russian FH team from Moscow, Russia out of which only C139G is shared with St.-Petersburg population [12,41]. To date a total of 47 different FH mutations are known from Russia. The data presented here enlarge the spectrum of mutations found in the Russian population and make us regard it as genetically heterogeneous.

Conclusions

We identified nineteen pathogenic mutations in the LDL receptor gene in 23 probands and two probably neutral mutations. In our study only four mutations in the LDL receptor gene (c.313+1G>A, c.651-653del3, C308Y and W422X) were found to be recurrent, i.e. all of those were found in two apparently unrelated families. Together with the data obtained earlier [12,38] our results present an evidence against the strong founder effect among Russian FH patients, and it is likely that in the St.-Petersburg area there is as much genetic heterogeneity as in most other areas of the world.

Competing interests

The author(s) declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

FMZ, MYM, VIG, PHN, GGN, AS performed cloning, SSCP, sequencing and familial analysis, BML, VOK, DD, ADD selected patients, VBV and OF participated in the study design and coordination. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Pre-publication history

The pre-publication history for this paper can be accessed here:
  37 in total

Review 1.  Familial defective apolipoprotein B-100: a mutation emerged in the mesolithic ancestors of Celtic peoples?

Authors:  A R Miserez; P Y Muller
Journal:  Atherosclerosis       Date:  2000-02       Impact factor: 5.162

2.  A comparison of fluorescent SSCP and denaturing HPLC for high throughput mutation scanning.

Authors:  L A Ellis; C F Taylor; G R Taylor
Journal:  Hum Mutat       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 4.878

3.  I705 variant in the low denisty lipoprotein receptor gene has no effect on plasma cholesterol levels.

Authors:  K E Heath; R A Whittal; G J Miller; S Humphries
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  2000-09       Impact factor: 6.318

4.  The mutation APOB-100 R3500Q in Eastern Europe.

Authors:  A Horvath; V Ganev
Journal:  Atherosclerosis       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 5.162

5.  Molecular medicine. The cholesterol quartet.

Authors:  J L Goldstein; M S Brown
Journal:  Science       Date:  2001-05-18       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  [Four new mutations and polymorphic variants of the low density lipoprotein receptor in patients with familial hypercholesterolemia in Saint Petersburg].

Authors:  Iu A Tatishcheva; M Iu Mandel'shtam; V I Golubkov; B M Lipovetskiĭ; V S Gaĭtskhoki
Journal:  Genetika       Date:  2001-09

7.  Identification of recurrent and novel mutations in the LDL receptor gene in German patients with familial hypercholesterolemia.

Authors:  M S Nauck; W Köster; K Dörfer; J Eckes; H Scharnagl; H Gierens; H Nissen; M A Nauck; H Wieland; W März
Journal:  Hum Mutat       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 4.878

8.  Mutation analysis in 36 unrelated Spanish subjects with familial hypercholesterolemia: identification of 3 novel mutations in the LDL receptor gene.

Authors:  P Mozas; A Cenarro; F Civeira; S Castillo; E Ros; M Pocovi
Journal:  Hum Mutat       Date:  2000-05       Impact factor: 4.878

9.  Spectrum of low density lipoprotein receptor mutations in Czech hypercholesterolemic patients.

Authors:  V Kuhrová; H Francová; P Zapletalová; T Freiberger; L Fajkusová; E Hrabincová; R Slováková; L Kozák
Journal:  Hum Mutat       Date:  2001-09       Impact factor: 4.878

10.  Autosomal recessive hypercholesterolemia caused by mutations in a putative LDL receptor adaptor protein.

Authors:  C K Garcia; K Wilund; M Arca; G Zuliani; R Fellin; M Maioli; S Calandra; S Bertolini; F Cossu; N Grishin; R Barnes; J C Cohen; H H Hobbs
Journal:  Science       Date:  2001-04-26       Impact factor: 47.728

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  15 in total

1.  The LDLR, APOB, and PCSK9 Variants of Index Patients with Familial Hypercholesterolemia in Russia.

Authors:  Alexey Meshkov; Alexandra Ershova; Anna Kiseleva; Evgenia Zotova; Evgeniia Sotnikova; Anna Petukhova; Anastasia Zharikova; Pavel Malyshev; Tatyana Rozhkova; Anastasia Blokhina; Alena Limonova; Vasily Ramensky; Mikhail Divashuk; Zukhra Khasanova; Anna Bukaeva; Olga Kurilova; Olga Skirko; Maria Pokrovskaya; Valeriya Mikova; Ekaterina Snigir; Alexsandra Akinshina; Sergey Mitrofanov; Daria Kashtanova; Valentin Makarov; Valeriy Kukharchuk; Sergey Boytsov; Sergey Yudin; Oxana Drapkina
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 4.096

Review 2.  ApoB-100 R3500Q mutation in the Lebanese population: prevalence and historical review of the literature.

Authors:  Amira S Sabbagh; Rose T Daher; Zaher K Otrock; Rabab N Abdel Khalek; Ghazi S Zaatari; Rami A R Mahfouz
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2006-12-08       Impact factor: 2.316

3.  Molecular characterization of Iranian patients with possible familial hypercholesterolemia.

Authors:  E Farrokhi; F Shayesteh; S Asadi Mobarakeh; F Roghani Dehkordi; K Ghatreh Samani; M Hashemzadeh Chaleshtori
Journal:  Indian J Clin Biochem       Date:  2011-02-10

4.  Common and rare single nucleotide polymorphisms in the LDLR gene are present in a black South African population and associate with low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels.

Authors:  Tertia van Zyl; Johann C Jerling; Karin R Conradie; Edith J M Feskens
Journal:  J Hum Genet       Date:  2013-11-28       Impact factor: 3.172

5.  Analysis of sequence variations in low-density lipoprotein receptor gene among Malaysian patients with familial hypercholesterolemia.

Authors:  Alyaa Al-Khateeb; Mohd K Zahri; Mohd S Mohamed; Teguh H Sasongko; Suhairi Ibrahim; Zurkurnai Yusof; Bin A Zilfalil
Journal:  BMC Med Genet       Date:  2011-03-19       Impact factor: 2.103

6.  A novel mutation (Cys308Phe) of the LDL receptor gene in families from the South-Eastern part of Poland.

Authors:  Małgorzata Waluś-Miarka; Marek Sanak; Barbara Idzior-Waluś; Przemysław Miarka; Przemysław Witek; Maciej T Małecki; Danuta Czarnecka
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2011-12-13       Impact factor: 2.316

7.  Polymorphisms in NOS3, MTHFR, APOB and TNF-α Genes and Risk of Coronary Atherosclerotic Lesions in Iranian Patients.

Authors:  Mohammad Mehdi Heidari; Mehri Khatami; Mehdi Hadadzadeh; Mahbobeh Kazemi; Sahar Mahamed; Pegah Malekzadeh; Massomeh Mirjalili
Journal:  Res Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2015-12-23

8.  Atherosclerotic and thrombotic genetic and environmental determinants in Egyptian coronary artery disease patients: a pilot study.

Authors:  Manal S Fawzy; Eman A Toraih; Nagwa M Aly; Abeer Fakhr-Eldeen; Dahlia I Badran; Mohammad H Hussein
Journal:  BMC Cardiovasc Disord       Date:  2017-01-13       Impact factor: 2.298

9.  Familial hypercholesterolemia mutations in Petrozavodsk: no similarity to St. Petersburg mutation spectrum.

Authors:  Tatiana Yu Komarova; Victoria A Korneva; Tatiana Yu Kuznetsova; Alexandra S Golovina; Vadim B Vasilyev; Michail Yu Mandelshtam
Journal:  BMC Med Genet       Date:  2013-12-27       Impact factor: 2.103

Review 10.  The distribution and characteristics of LDL receptor mutations in China: A systematic review.

Authors:  Long Jiang; Li-Yuan Sun; Yan-Fang Dai; Shi-Wei Yang; Feng Zhang; Lu-Ya Wang
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2015-11-26       Impact factor: 4.379

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