Journal of Lipid Research (Jan 1998)

Association between plasma HDL-cholesterol concentration and Taq1B CETP gene polymorphism in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus

  • Sophie Bernard,
  • Philippe Moulin,
  • Laurent Lagrost,
  • Sylvie Picard,
  • Mounib Elchebly,
  • Gabriel Ponsin,
  • François Chapuis,
  • François Berthezène

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 39, no. 1
pp. 59 – 65

Abstract

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The effects of CETP gene Taq1B polymorphism on plasma lipoproteins were investigated in 176 patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. The distribution of CETP genotypes was similar to that previously described in the general population. A significant association was found between CETP genotype and both CETP and HDL cholesterol (HDL-c) concentrations. B1B1 had the highest CETP and the lowest HDL-c whereas B2B2 had the lowest CETP and the highest HDL-c. However, HDL-c was not correlated with CETP concentration, even when genetic groups were separately considered. By multivariate analysis, the determinants of HDL were body mass index, triglycerides concentration, net mass CE transfer, and CETP genotype. No association was found between CETP genetic groups and HDL or LDL size distribution. In contrast, net mass CET was positively and HDL and LDL sizes were negatively correlated with plasma triglyceride concentration. Overall, our work demonstrates that, in a population of diabetic patients where lipoprotein-related parameters vary over a large range, the association of CETP gene polymorphism with HDL-c is independent of plasma CETP concentration.—Bernard, S., P. Moulin, L. Lagrost, S. Picard, M. Elchebly, G. Ponsin, F. Chapuis, and F. Berthezène. Association between plasma HDL-cholesterol concentration and Taq1B CETP gene polymorphism in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. J. Lipid Res. 1998. 39: 59–65.

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