Journal of Lipid Research (Mar 2013)

Structural and functional analysis of APOA5 mutations identified in patients with severe hypertriglyceridemia[S]

  • Elena Mendoza-Barberá,
  • Josep Julve,
  • Stefan K. Nilsson,
  • Aivar Lookene,
  • Jesús M. Martín-Campos,
  • Rosa Roig,
  • Alfonso M. Lechuga-Sancho,
  • John H. Sloan,
  • Pablo Fuentes-Prior,
  • Francisco Blanco-Vaca

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54, no. 3
pp. 649 – 661

Abstract

Read online

During the diagnosis of three unrelated patients with severe hypertriglyceridemia, three APOA5 mutations [p.(Ser232_Leu235)del, p.Leu253Pro, and p.Asp332ValfsX4] were found without evidence of concomitant LPL, APOC2, or GPIHBP1 mutations. The molecular mechanisms by which APOA5 mutations result in severe hypertriglyceridemia remain poorly understood, and the functional impairment/s induced by these specific mutations was not obvious. Therefore, we performed a thorough structural and functional analysis that included follow-up of patients and their closest relatives, measurement of apoA-V serum concentrations, and sequencing of the APOA5 gene in 200 nonhyperlipidemic controls. Further, we cloned, overexpressed, and purified both wild-type and mutant apoA-V variants and characterized their capacity to activate LPL. The interactions of recombinant wild-type and mutated apoA-V variants with liposomes of different composition, heparin, LRP1, sortilin, and SorLA/LR11 were also analyzed. Finally, to explore the possible structural consequences of these mutations, we developed a three-dimensional model of full-length, lipid-free human apoA-V. A complex, wide array of impairments was found in each of the three mutants, suggesting that the specific residues affected are critical structural determinants for apoA-V function in lipoprotein metabolism and, therefore, that these APOA5 mutations are a direct cause of hypertriglyceridemia.

Keywords