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Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 37, 651-661, Copyright © 1996 by Lipid Research, Inc.
M Rouis, P Lohse, KA Dugi, P Lohse, OU Beg, R Ronan, GD Talley, JD Brunzell and S Santamarina-Fojo
Familial lipoprotein lipase (LPL) deficiency is an inherited disorder of
lipoprotein metabolism characterized by hypertriglyceridemia and recurrent
episodes of abdominal pain and pancreatitis. We have studied the genetic
basis of LPL deficiency in a 62-year-old black male with undetectable pre-
and post-heparin plasma LPL mass and activity, DNA sequence analysis of the
patient's LPL cDNA and gene as well as digestion with Bcl I and Asu I
revealed that the proband is a homozygote for two separate gene defects.
One mutation changed a G to an A, resulting in the conversion of amino acid
9 of the mature protein, aspartic acid (GAC), to asparagine (AAC). The
second substitution, a C for a T, replaced tyrosine (TAC) at residue 262
with histidine (CAC). Northern blot analysis of monocyte-derived macrophage
RNA demonstrated the presence of LPL mRNA of approximately normal size and
quantity when compared to control. Expression of both mutations separately
(pCMV-9 and pCMV-262) or in combination (pCMV-9+262) in human embryonal
kidney-293 cells demonstrated that LPL-9 had approximately 80% the specific
activity of wild type LPL, but LPL-262 and LPL-9+262 had no enzymic
activity, thus establishing the functional significance of the LPL-262
defect. Despite an absolute deficiency of LPL mass and activity
demonstrated by analysis of patient post-heparin plasma, in vitro
expression of both LPL mutants was normal, suggesting that the absence of
LPL in patient post-heparin plasma was a result of altered in vivo
processing. Analysis of the heparin binding properties of the mutant
enzymes by heparin-Sepharose affinity chromatography indicated that most of
the LPL-262 mass was present in an inactive peak, which like the normal LPL
monomer, eluted at 0.8 M NaCl. Thus, the Tyr262 --> His mutation may
alter the stability of the LPL dimer, leading to the formation of inactive
LPL-262 monomer which exhibits reduced heparin affinity. Based on these
results, we propose that, in vivo, enhanced formation of LPL-9+262 monomer
leads to abnormal binding of the mutant lipase to endothelial
glycosaminoglycans ultimately resulting in enhanced catabolism of the
mutant enzyme and lower enzyme mass in post-heparin plasma.
ARTICLES
Homozygosity for two point mutations in the lipoprotein lipase (LPL) gene in a patient with familial LPL deficiency: LPL(Asp9-->Asn, Tyr262-- >His)
Molecular Disease Branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
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