Familial apolipoprotein A-I and C-III deficiency, variant II
- PMID: 3934306
Familial apolipoprotein A-I and C-III deficiency, variant II
Abstract
The biochemical, clinical, and genetic features were examined in the proband (homozygote) and heterozygotes (n = 17) affected with familial apolipoprotein A-I and C-III deficiency, variant II (previously described as apolipoprotein A-I absence). The proband was a 45-year-old white female with mild corneal opacification and significant three-vessel coronary artery disease (CAD), who died shortly after bypass surgery. Autopsy findings included significant atherosclerosis in the coronary and pulmonary arteries and the abdominal aorta as well as extracellular stromal lipid deposition in the cornea. No reticuloendothelial lipid deposits in the liver, bone marrow, or spleen were noted (unlike Tangier disease). Laboratory features included marked high density lipoprotein (HDL) deficiency and undetectable plasma apolipoproteins (apo) A-I and C-III. The percentage of plasma cholesterol in the unesterified form was normal at 30%. The activity and mass of lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) were 42% and 36% of normal, respectively, and the cholesterol esterification rate was 43% of normal. Deficiencies of plasma vitamin E and essential fatty acid (linoleic, C18:2) were also noted. Evaluation of plasma lipoproteins and apolipoproteins in 37 kindred members revealed 17 heterozygotes with HDL cholesterol values below the 10th percentile of normal. Of these, all had apoA-I levels more than one standard deviation below the normal mean, and 37.5% had a similar decrease in apoC-III values. Mean (+/- SD) plasma HDL cholesterol, apoA-I, and apoC-III values (mg/dl) in heterozygotes were 54.0%, 62.4%, and 79.2% of normal, respectively. No evidence of CAD was observed in 10 heterozygotes 40 years of age or less; however, CAD was detected in 3 of 7 heterozygotes over 40 years of age, one of whom died at age 56 years of complications of myocardial infarction and stroke. The inheritance pattern in this kindred was autosomal codominant. ApoA-I isolated from a heterozygote had an isoelectric focusing pattern and amino acid composition similar to normal. Utilizing DNA isolated from two obligate heterozygotes, no abnormalities in the apoA-I or apoC-III genes were detected by Southern blot analysis utilizing specific probes following restriction enzyme digestion. The data indicate that familial apolipoprotein A-I and C-III deficiency, variant II, is similar to variant I (described by Norum et al. 1982. N. Engl. J. Med. 306: 1513-1519), but differs at the clinical level (lack of xanthomas), the biochemical level (lack of detectable apoA-I, lower apoA-II level), and at the gene level.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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