Literature DB >> 17192696

Serum apolipoprotein j in health, coronary heart disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Takeshi Kujiraoka1, Hiroaki Hattori, Yoshikazu Miwa, Mitsuaki Ishihara, Takahiro Ueno, Jun Ishii, Masahiro Tsuji, Tadao Iwasaki, Yoshiyuki Sasaguri, Takayuki Fujioka, Satoshi Saito, Motoo Tsushima, Taro Maruyama, Irina P Miller, Norman E Miller, Tohru Egashira.   

Abstract

Apolipoprotein (apo) J, clusterin, is ubiquitously expressed in many tissues, and is a component of high-density lipoproteins (HDLs). There is experimental evidence that it may be anti-atherogenic through its effects on cholesterol transport, smooth muscle cell proliferation and lipid peroxidation. HDLs containing apo J and apo A-I carry paraoxonase (PON1), which protects low-density lipoproteins from oxidative modification; however, the extent to which apo J affects coronary heart disease (CHD) is not known. We have developed a sandwich ELISA that enables apo J to be assayed in the range of 13-200 microg/mL. Serum apo J was 52.8+/-0.8 microg/mL (mean+/-SEM; range, 36.0-84.3 microg/mL; n=92) in healthy Japanese men, and 49.3+/-0.5 microg/mL (34.5-72.8; n=241) in healthy Japanese women. Multiple regression of these data and results from 67 men with CHD showed that apo J concentration was unrelated to age, sex or body mass index, but was positively related to serum PON1 (p<0.001) and apo B (p<0.02) concentrations. In women, it was also positively related to blood glucose (p<0.02). After adjusting for its associations with covariates, serum apo J averaged 5.4 microg/mL, lower in CHD men than in controls (p<0.003). Type 2 diabetics had higher apo J concentrations (men, 83.1+/-3.4 microg/mL, n=64; women, 64.0+/-2.3 microg/mL, n=46) than healthy men and women (p<0.001). In these Type 2 diabetics, apo J concentration was unrelated to PON1 concentration, but was positively related to blood glucose (p<0.01). After adjustment for its relation to blood glucose, the mean apo J concentration was similar in diabetics and healthy subjects. These findings suggest that apo J may be anti-atherogenic in humans, and that its concentration is raised by Type 2 diabetes.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17192696     DOI: 10.5551/jat.13.314

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Atheroscler Thromb        ISSN: 1340-3478            Impact factor:   4.928


  19 in total

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Authors:  Matthew Schenk; Fabian Eichelmann; Matthias B Schulze; Natalia Rudovich; Andreas F Pfeiffer; Romina di Giuseppe; Heiner Boeing; Krasimira Aleksandrova
Journal:  Biomark Med       Date:  2019-06-03       Impact factor: 2.851

2.  Clusterin and chemotherapy sensitivity under normoxic and graded hypoxic conditions in colorectal cancer.

Authors:  David Kevans; Sheeona Gorman; Miriam Tosetto; Kieran Sheahan; Diarmuid O'Donoghue; Hugh Mulcahy; Jacintha O'Sullivan
Journal:  J Gastrointest Cancer       Date:  2012-06

3.  Differential effects of growth hormone versus insulin-like growth factor-I on the mouse plasma proteome.

Authors:  Juan Ding; Edward O List; Brian D Bower; John J Kopchick
Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  2011-07-26       Impact factor: 4.736

4.  Circulating clusterin (apolipoprotein J) levels do not have any day/night variability and are positively associated with total and LDL cholesterol levels in young healthy individuals.

Authors:  Konstantinos N Aronis; Maria T Vamvini; John P Chamberland; Christos S Mantzoros
Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2011-09-07       Impact factor: 5.958

5.  Low clusterin levels in high-density lipoprotein associate with insulin resistance, obesity, and dyslipoproteinemia.

Authors:  Andrew N Hoofnagle; Mingyuan Wu; Albina K Gosmanova; Jessica O Becker; Ellen M Wijsman; John D Brunzell; Steven E Kahn; Robert H Knopp; Timothy J Lyons; Jay W Heinecke
Journal:  Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol       Date:  2010-09-16       Impact factor: 8.311

6.  Clusterin from human clinical tear samples: Positive correlation between tear concentration and Schirmer strip test results.

Authors:  Valerie Yu; Dhruva Bhattacharya; Andrew Webster; Aditi Bauskar; Charles Flowers; Martin Heur; Shravan K Chintala; Tatsuo Itakura; Mark R Wilson; Joseph T Barr; Shinwu Jeong; Mingwu Wang; M Elizabeth Fini
Journal:  Ocul Surf       Date:  2018-08-02       Impact factor: 5.033

7.  Circulating ApoJ is closely associated with insulin resistance in human subjects.

Authors:  Ji A Seo; Min-Cheol Kang; Theodore P Ciaraldi; Sang Soo Kim; Kyong Soo Park; Charles Choe; Won Min Hwang; Dong Mee Lim; Olivia Farr; Christos Mantzoros; Robert R Henry; Young-Bum Kim
Journal:  Metabolism       Date:  2017-10-03       Impact factor: 8.694

8.  Sterol O-acyltransferase 2 chaperoned by apolipoprotein J facilitates hepatic lipid accumulation following viral and nutrient stresses.

Authors:  Hung-Yu Sun; Tzu-Ying Chen; Yu-Ching Tan; Chun-Hsiang Wang; Kung-Chia Young
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2021-05-12

9.  Plasma clusterin concentrations may predict resistance to intravenous immunoglobulin in patients with Kawasaki disease.

Authors:  Mei-Chen Ou-Yang; Ho-Chang Kuo; I-Chun Lin; Jiunn-Ming Sheen; Fu-Chen Huang; Chih-Cheng Chen; Ying-Hsien Huang; Ying-Jui Lin; Hong-Ren Yu
Journal:  ScientificWorldJournal       Date:  2013-07-15

10.  Development of reverse phase protein microarrays for the validation of clusterin, a mid-abundant blood biomarker.

Authors:  Adriana Aguilar-Mahecha; Christiane Cantin; Maureen O'Connor-McCourt; Andre Nantel; Mark Basik
Journal:  Proteome Sci       Date:  2009-04-06       Impact factor: 2.480

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