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Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 32, 1001-1011, Copyright © 1991 by Lipid Research, Inc.
ApoB-54.8, a truncated apolipoprotein found primarily in VLDL, is associated with a nonsense mutation in the apoB gene and hypobetalipoproteinemia
RD Wagner, ES Krul, J Tang, KG Parhofer, K Garlock, P Talmud and G Schonfeld
Department of Internal Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110.
A new, large kindred with hypobetalipoproteinemia and a previously
undescribed truncated form of apolipoprotein B (apoB) has been identified.
The asymptomatic, Caucasian male proband (CK, aged 37 years) has total
plasma cholesterol, triglyceride, low density lipoprotein-(LDL)
cholesterol, high density lipoprotein- (HDL) cholesterol, and apoB
concentrations of 108, 131, 32, 50, and 16 mg/dl, respectively. Plasma
samples of 11 family members spanning three generations, which had less
than 5th percentile concentrations of LDL- cholesterol, contained three
apoB bands detected on immunoblots: the normal apoB-100 and apoB-48 and an
unusual band of apparent molecular mass of 299,356 +/- 9580 daltons
(approximately 54% the molecular weight of apoB-100). Additional
immunoblotting experiments using several different anti-apoB monoclonal
antibodies showed that the carboxyl terminal of apoB-100 had been deleted
somewhere between amino acid residues 2148-2488. A segment of genomic DNA
from the proband was amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) between
nucleotides 7491- 7791 of Exon 26 of the apoB gene. The DNA segment was
cloned into pGEM3Zf(-) and sequenced. A C----T transition was found at
nucleotide 7665, resulting in a premature stop codon at amino acid residue
2486 corresponding to apoB-54.8. These results were confirmed by direct
sequencing of PCR products from three apoB-54.8 positive and three apoB-
54.8 negative kindred members. Allele-specific oligonucleotides were used
to identify other affected family members. Cosegregation of apoB- 54.8 with
the C----T transition occurred in all cases. Based on haplotypes
constructed from restriction fragment length polymorphism, variable number
of tandem repeats, and 5' insertion/deletion analyses and from the presence
or absence of apoB-54.8, it was possible to assign a single allele of apoB
to the mutation throughout the family. In contrast with other shorter
truncations such as apoB-31, apoB-40, and apoB-46, which are found with
particles in the HDL density range, and apoB-89 that is found primarily
with LDL, apoB-54.8 was found primarily in very low density lipoproteins,
much less in LDL, and was virtually absent in HDL. This suggests that the
length of the truncation may significantly affect the metabolism of the
associated lipoprotein particles.

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Copyright © 1991 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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