Journal of Lipid Research (Mar 2007)

Cholesteryl ester transfer protein and hyperalphalipoproteinemia in Caucasianss⃞

  • Wim A. van der Steeg,
  • G. Kees Hovingh,
  • Anke H.E.M. Klerkx,
  • Barbara A. Hutten,
  • Inge C. Nootenboom,
  • Johannes H.M. Levels,
  • Arie van Tol,
  • Gees M. Dallinga-Thie,
  • Aeilko H. Zwinderman,
  • John J.P. Kastelein,
  • Jan Albert Kuivenhoven

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 48, no. 3
pp. 674 – 682

Abstract

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It is unclear whether cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) contributes to high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels in hyperalphalipoproteinemia (HALP) in Caucasians. Moreover, even less is known about the effects of hereditary CETP deficiency in non-Japanese. We studied 95 unrelated Caucasian individuals with HALP. No correlations between CETP concentration or activity and HDL-C were identified. Screening for CETP gene defects led to the identification of heterozygosity for a novel splice site mutation in one individual. Twenty-five heterozygotes for this mutation showed reduced CETP concentration (−40%) and activity (−50%) and a 35% increase of HDL-C compared with family controls. The heterozygotes presented with an isolated high HDL-C, whereas the remaining subjects exhibited a typical high HDL-C/low-triglyceride phenotype. The increase of HDL-C in the CETP-deficient heterozygotes was primarily attributable to increased high density lipoprotein containing apolipoprotein A-I and A-II (LpAI:AII) levels, contrasting with an increase in both high density lipoprotein containing apolipoprotein A-I only and LpAI:AII in the other group. This study suggests the absence of a relationship between CETP and HDL-C levels in Caucasians with HALP. The data furthermore indicate that genetic CETP deficiency is rare among Caucasians and that this disorder presents with a phenotype that is different from that of subjects with HALP who have no mutation in the CETP gene.

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