Literature DB >> 1911716

Interaction between variant apolipoproteins C-II and E that affects plasma lipoprotein concentrations.

R A Hegele1, W C Breckenridge, D W Cox, G F Maguire, J A Little, P W Connelly.   

Abstract

The genes for apolipoprotein (apo) C-II, a cofactor for activation of lipoprotein lipase, and apo E, a ligand for receptor-mediated uptake of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins, are physically linked on chromosome 19q13.1. In a large Caribbean Caucasian family, several individuals had clinical features of the complete absence of lipoprotein lipase activity and were homozygous for a DNA frameshift mutation of apo C-II, imparting functional inactivity to the mutant protein. Plasma from heterozygous carriers of this mutation, when compared with plasma from relatives who were noncarriers, had significantly diminished capacity to activate lipoprotein lipase in vitro. We also observed in heterozygotes for this mutation a wide range of serum lipid and lipoprotein levels. When age and sex were taken into account, the presence of a single apo E allele encoding the E4 isoform occurring in individuals with a single mutant apo C-II allele was strongly associated with higher levels of cholesterol, triglycerides, very low density lipoprotein cholesterol, and non-high density lipoprotein cholesterol when compared with those of relatives who carried neither or only one variant allele. This suggests that a single genetic mutation that usually has a recessive effect on lipoprotein metabolism can have an interactive effect on lipid phenotype when it is coinherited with a single mutation at another gene whose product affects the same metabolic pathway.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1911716     DOI: 10.1161/01.atv.11.5.1303

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arterioscler Thromb        ISSN: 1049-8834


  6 in total

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2.  Overexpression of apolipoprotein CII causes hypertriglyceridemia in transgenic mice.

Authors:  N S Shachter; T Hayek; T Leff; J D Smith; D W Rosenberg; A Walsh; R Ramakrishnan; I J Goldberg; H N Ginsberg; J L Breslow
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3.  Electrophoretic screening for human apolipoprotein C-II variants: repeated identification of apolipoprotein C-II(K19T).

Authors:  H Wiebusch; J R Nofer; A von Eckardstein; H Funke; U Wahrburg; H Martin; E Köhler; G Assmann
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4.  Apolipoprotein CII-Padova (Tyr37-->stop) as a cause of chylomicronaemia in an Italian kindred from Siculiana.

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Review 5.  The polygenic nature of hypertriglyceridaemia: implications for definition, diagnosis, and management.

Authors:  Robert A Hegele; Henry N Ginsberg; M John Chapman; Børge G Nordestgaard; Jan Albert Kuivenhoven; Maurizio Averna; Jan Borén; Eric Bruckert; Alberico L Catapano; Olivier S Descamps; G Kees Hovingh; Steve E Humphries; Petri T Kovanen; Luis Masana; Päivi Pajukanta; Klaus G Parhofer; Frederick J Raal; Kausik K Ray; Raul D Santos; Anton F H Stalenhoef; Erik Stroes; Marja-Riitta Taskinen; Anne Tybjærg-Hansen; Gerald F Watts; Olov Wiklund
Journal:  Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol       Date:  2013-12-23       Impact factor: 32.069

6.  Gene-gene and gene-environment interactions: new insights into the prevention, detection and management of coronary artery disease.

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Journal:  Genome Med       Date:  2009-02-26       Impact factor: 11.117

  6 in total

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