| Literature DB >> 16431216 |
Xue-Hui Yu1, Tie-Qiang Zhao, Li Wang, Zhao-Ping Liu, Cheng-Mei Zhang, Rong Chen, Li Li, George Liu, Wei-Cheng Hu.
Abstract
A patient with severe hypertriglyceridemia and recurrent pancreatitis was found to have significantly decreased lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity and normal apolipoprotein C-II concentration in post-heparin plasma. DNA analysis of the LPL gene revealed two mutations, one of which was a novel homozygous G-->C substitution, resulting in the conversion of a translation initiation codon methionine to isoleucine (LPL-1). The second was the previously reported heterozygous substitution of glutamic acid at residue 242 with lysine (LPL-242). In vitro expression of both mutations separately or in combination demonstrated that LPL-1 had approximately 3% protein mass and 2% activity, whereas LPL-242 had undetectable activity but normal mass. The combined mutation LPL-1-242 exhibited similar changes as for LPL-1, with markedly reduced mass, and for LPL-242, with undetectable activity. These results suggest that the homozygous initiator codon mutation rather than the heterozygous LPL-242 alteration was mainly responsible for the patient phenotypes.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16431216 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2005.12.165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Biophys Res Commun ISSN: 0006-291X Impact factor: 3.575