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JLR Patient-Oriented and Epidemiological Research
2 Results
- Patient-Oriented and Epidemiological ResearchOpen Access
Partial LPL deletions: rare copy-number variants contributing towards severe hypertriglyceridemia
Journal of Lipid ResearchVol. 60Issue 11p1953–1958Published online: September 13, 2019- Jacqueline S. Dron
- Jian Wang
- Adam D. McIntyre
- Henian Cao
- John F. Robinson
- P. Barton Duell
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 12Severe hypertriglyceridemia (HTG) is a relatively common form of dyslipidemia with a complex pathophysiology and serious health complications. HTG can develop in the presence of rare genetic factors disrupting genes involved in the triglyceride (TG) metabolic pathway, including large-scale copy-number variants (CNVs). Improvements in next-generation sequencing technologies and bioinformatic analyses have better allowed assessment of CNVs as possible causes of or contributors to severe HTG. We screened targeted sequencing data of 632 patients with severe HTG and identified partial deletions of the LPL gene, encoding the central enzyme involved in the metabolism of TG-rich lipoproteins, in four individuals (0.63%). - Patient-Oriented and Epidemiological ResearchOpen Access
Use of next-generation sequencing to detect LDLR gene copy number variation in familial hypercholesterolemia
Journal of Lipid ResearchVol. 58Issue 11p2202–2209Published online: September 5, 2017- Michael A. Iacocca
- Jian Wang
- Jacqueline S. Dron
- John F. Robinson
- Adam D. McIntyre
- Henian Cao
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 60Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) is a heritable condition of severely elevated LDL cholesterol, caused predominantly by autosomal codominant mutations in the LDL receptor gene (LDLR). In providing a molecular diagnosis for FH, the current procedure often includes targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) panels for the detection of small-scale DNA variants, followed by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) in LDLR for the detection of whole-exon copy number variants (CNVs). The latter is essential because ∼10% of FH cases are attributed to CNVs in LDLR; accounting for them decreases false negative findings.