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Glu Mutation of the LDL Receptor Gene and Co-occurrence of a De Novo Deletion of the LDL Receptor Gene in the Same Family
From the Departments of Medicine (U.-M.K., H.G., T.A.M., K.K.) and of Pharmacology and Toxicology (U.-M.K.), University of Oulu, and Department of Medicine (K.K.), University of Helsinki (Finland).
Correspondence to Kimmo Kontula, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Helsinki, FIN 00290, Helsinki, Finland.
Abstract We identified a large family in which a
hitherto unreported point mutation of the LDL receptor gene
(Asp235
Glu) cosegregated with moderately elevated serum LDL
cholesterol concentration. Within one generation, the mean
serum total and LDL cholesterol levels in four heterozygous
carriers of this mutation (7.76±1.46 and 5.89±1.56 mmol/L,
respectively) were significantly (P<.05) higher than the
corresponding concentrations in their five nonaffected siblings
(5.81±0.57 and 3.77±0.54 mmol/L, respectively). Lipid levels in
carriers of the Asp235
Glu mutation were, however, markedly lower
than the corresponding total and LDL cholesterol levels
(about 12 and 10 mmol/L, respectively) in heterozygous patients
with the two common LDL receptor mutations (FH-Helsinki and FH-North
Karelia). None of the four siblings in the age range of 54 to 69 years
had experienced a myocardial infarction, although symptoms suggestive
of coronary artery disease were present in two and tendon
xanthomas were found in one. Expression of the mutant receptor in COS
cells indicated an approximately 50% to 70% reduction of LDL-binding
activity compared with the normal receptor. One patient (female, aged
39 years) had severe hypercholesterolemia in
the range of 13 to 20 mmol/L when untreated, extensive
coronary artery disease as demonstrated by angiography, and
extensor tendon xanthomatosis. In addition to the Asp235
Glu
mutation, she was found to have a de novo deletion of exons 14 and 15
in her other LDL receptor allele. In this subject, the total LDL
receptor activity of mitogen-stimulated blood lymphocytes was very low.
In conclusion, along with another LDL receptor gene mutation (FH-Espoo
or deletion of exon 15) described by us previously, the Asp235
Glu
mutation (designated as FH-Keuruu) indicates that moderate varieties of
inherited hypercholesterolemia may result from
LDL receptor gene mutations of mild expression.
Key Words: LDL receptor gene mutation familial hypercholesterolemia
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A. F. Vuorio, H. Turtola, and K. Kontula Neonatal Diagnosis of Familial Hypercholesterolemia in Newborns Born to a Parent With a Molecularly Defined Heterozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol, November 1, 1997; 17(11): 3332 - 3337. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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