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Prevalence of ANGPTL3 and APOB gene mutations in subjects with combined hypolipidemia

Authors :
Mariangela Ditta
Pin Yue
Giovanni Battista Vigna
Elisa Pinotti
Angelo B. Cefalù
Patrizia Tarugi
Francesca Fayer
Sekar Kathiresan
Rossella Spina
Vincenza Valenti
Maurizio Averna
Davide Noto
Noto, D
Cefalù, A
Valenti, V
Fayer, F
Pinotti, E
Ditta, M
Spina, R
Vigna, G
Yue, P
Kathiresan, S
Tarugi, P
Averna, M
Source :
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology. 32(3)
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Objective— Mutations of the ANGPTL3 gene have been associated with a novel form of primary hypobetalipoproteinemia, the combined hypolipidemia (cHLP), characterized by low total cholesterol and low HDL-cholesterol levels. The aim of this work is to define the role of ANGPTL3 gene as determinant of the combined hypolipidemia phenotype in 2 large cohorts of 913 among American and Italian subjects with primary hypobetalipoproteinemia (total cholesterol Methods and Results— The combined hypolipidemia cut-offs were chosen according to total cholesterol and HDL-cholesterol levels reported in the ANGPTL3 kindred described to date: total cholesterol levels, ANGPTL3 and APOB genes. We identified nonsense and/or missense mutations in ANGPTL3 gene in 8 subjects; no mutations of the APOB gene were found. Mutated ANGPTL3 homozygous/compound heterozygous subjects showed a more severe biochemical phenotype compared to heterozygous or ANGPTL3 negative subjects, although ANGPTL3 heterozygotes did not differ from ANGPTL3 negative subjects. Conclusion— These results demonstrated that in a cohort of subjects with severe primary hypobetalipoproteinemia the prevalence of ANGPTL3 gene mutations responsible for a combined hypolipidemia phenotype is about 10%, whereas mutations of APOB gene are absent.

Details

ISSN :
15244636
Volume :
32
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fc488275c48647345ca1d610a58f6cec