Association of a genetic polymorphism in human apolipoprotein B-100 with intermediate density lipoprotein concentrations |
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Authors: | Miguel T. Robinson,René Butler,Ronald M. Krauss |
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Affiliation: | Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley. |
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Abstract: | Immunochemical techniques have been used to identify five antigenic (Ag) sites on apolipoprotein B-100 (apoB), the major protein constituent of very low density (VLDL), intermediate density (IDL), and low density lipoproteins (LDL). Each Ag site results from allelic variation at a specific locus of the apoB gene. In the present study, we assessed whether variations in the five Ag loci were associated with concentrations of plasma lipids or lipoprotein fractions measured by analytical ultracentrifugation in a group of 44 healthy men. Pair-wise analyses of the Ag markers revealed that Ag(a1/d), in association with either Ag(x/y) or Ag(t/z), is significantly related to plasma IDL-mass concentrations. In this cohort we detected no significant associations of the Ag alleles (singly or in combination) with plasma total cholesterol, triglycerides, LDL-cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, or mass of total VLDL or LDL. These results suggest that genetic variations in the apoB molecule may predispose to variations in concentrations of IDL that could have consequences for atherosclerotic risk. |
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Keywords: | Ag blood groups analytical ultracentrifugation antigenic determinants low density lipoproteins |
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