High density lipoproteins, reverse transport of cholesterol, and coronary artery disease. Insights from mutations.

G Assmann, A Von Eckardstein, H Funke - Circulation, 1993 - europepmc.org
G Assmann, A Von Eckardstein, H Funke
Circulation, 1993europepmc.org
Background The reverse cholesterol transport model is most widely used to explain both the
role of high density lipoproteins (HDL) in lipid metabolism and the inverse association
between HDL cholesterol plasma concentration and the risk for coronary artery disease
(CAD). As familial HDL cholesterol deficiency is frequently paralleled with a family history of
premature CAD, much interest has been directed toward the molecular defects in
apolipoproteins and lipid-transfer enzymes involved in the formation and metabolism of …
Background
The reverse cholesterol transport model is most widely used to explain both the role of high density lipoproteins (HDL) in lipid metabolism and the inverse association between HDL cholesterol plasma concentration and the risk for coronary artery disease (CAD). As familial HDL cholesterol deficiency is frequently paralleled with a family history of premature CAD, much interest has been directed toward the molecular defects in apolipoproteins and lipid-transfer enzymes involved in the formation and metabolism of HDL. Knowledge of the basic defects in rare HDL-deficiency syndromes and apolipoprotein variants provides genetic markers of whether the presence of these molecular defects accounts for low HDL cholesterol levels and the accompanying coronary risk.
Methods and results
Sequence analysis of proteins or DNA from patients with HDL deficiency or hyperalphalipoproteinemia as well as from randomly screened probands has helped to identify a series of molecular defects in the genes of apolipoprotein (apo) AI, apo A-II, apo A-IV, apo C-III, lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase, and cholesterol ester-transfer protein. Some of these mutations were associated with absent and low levels of HDL cholesterol in homozygous and heterozygous carries, respectively, but only a few homozygotes were at an increased risk of CAD. These mutations were invaluable for gaining insight into structural-functional relations in HDL metabolism.
Conclusions
Mutations in the genes of apo AI, apo A-II, apo A-IV, apo C-III, lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase, and cholesterol ester-transfer protein can influence HDL cholesterol plasma concentrations but do not account for the coronary risk associated with low HDL cholesterol levels. In general, these observations suggest that the low HDL concentrations in CAD patients are not a reflection of impaired reverse cholesterol transport but rather of some other metabolic disturbances, such as catabolism of triglyceride-rich particles.
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