The LMF1 (lipase maturation factor 1) gene encodes a protein involved in lipoprotein lipase and hepatic lipase maturation. Homozygous mutations in LMF1 leading to severe hypertriglyceridemia (SHTG) ar Show more
The LMF1 (lipase maturation factor 1) gene encodes a protein involved in lipoprotein lipase and hepatic lipase maturation. Homozygous mutations in LMF1 leading to severe hypertriglyceridemia (SHTG) are rare in the literature. A few additional rare LMF1 variants have been described with poor functional studies. The aim of this study was to assess the frequency of LMF1 variants in a cohort of 385 patients with SHTG, without homozygous or compound heterozygous deleterious mutations identified in lipoprotein lipase (LPL), apolipoprotein A5 (APOA5), apolipoprotein C2 (APOC2), glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored high-density lipoprotein binding protein 1 (GPIHBP1) genes, and to determine their functionality. LMF1 coding variants were screened using denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography followed by direct sequencing. In silico studies of LMF1 variants were performed, followed by in vitro functional studies using human embryonic kidney 293T (HEK-293T) cells cotransfected with vectors encoding human LPL and LMF1 cDNA. LPL activity was measured in cell culture medium after heparin addition using human VLDL-TG as substrate. Nineteen nonsynonymous coding LMF1 variants were identified in 65 patients; 10 variants were newly described in SHTG. In vitro, p.Gly172Arg, p.Arg354Trp, p.Arg364Gln, and p.Arg537Trp LMF1 variants decreased LPL activity, and the p.Trp464Ter variant completely abolished LPL activity. We identified a young girl heterozygote for the p.Trp464Ter variant and a homozygote carrier of the p.Gly172Arg variant with a near 50% decreased LPL activity in vitro and in vivo. The study confirms the rarity of LMF1 variants in a large cohort of patients with SHTG. LMF1 variants are likely to be involved in multifactorial hyperchylomicronemia. Partial LMF1 defects could be associated with intermittent phenotype as described for p.Gly172Arg homozygous and p.Trp464Ter heterozygous carriers. Show less
Optimal molecular diagnosis of primary dyslipidemia is challenging to confirm the diagnosis, test and identify at risk relatives. The aim of this study was to test the application of a single targeted Show more
Optimal molecular diagnosis of primary dyslipidemia is challenging to confirm the diagnosis, test and identify at risk relatives. The aim of this study was to test the application of a single targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) panel for hypercholesterolemia, hypocholesterolemia, and hypertriglyceridemia molecular diagnosis. NGS workflow based on a custom AmpliSeq panel was designed for sequencing the most prevalent dyslipidemia-causing genes (ANGPTL3, APOA5, APOC2, APOB, GPIHBP1, LDLR, LMF1, LPL, PCSK9) on the Ion PGM Sequencer. One hundred and forty patients without molecular diagnosis were studied. In silico analyses were performed using the NextGENe software and homemade tools for detection of copy number variations (CNV). All mutations were confirmed using appropriate tools. Eighty seven variations and 4 CNV were identified, allowing a molecular diagnosis for 40/116 hypercholesterolemic patients, 5/13 hypocholesterolemic patients, and 2/11, hypertriglyceridemic patients respectively. This workflow allowed the detection of CNV contrary to our previous strategy. Some variations were found in previously unexplored regions providing an added value for genotype-phenotype correlation and familial screening. In conclusion, this new NGS process is an effective mutation detection method and allows better understanding of phenotype. Consequently this assay meets the medical need for individualized diagnosis of dyslipidemia. Show less
APOC3 is a major regulator of triglycerides metabolism. Several APOC3 variants are associated with hypertriglyceridemia (HTG). Our aim was to establish the potential regulation of APOC3 3'UTR variants Show more
APOC3 is a major regulator of triglycerides metabolism. Several APOC3 variants are associated with hypertriglyceridemia (HTG). Our aim was to establish the potential regulation of APOC3 3'UTR variants associated with HTG by liver or intestinal miRNAs. We sequenced APOC3 3'UTR in 100 type 2 diabetic (TD2) patients with severe HTG (TG > 15 mmol/L) (HTG group) compared to 100 normotriglyceridemic patients (NTG group). We performed in silico studies to identify potential loss of miRNA binding induced by APOC3 3'UTR variants. We also performed in vitro studies to test the functionality of miRNA/APOC3 variants interactions: APOC3 3'UTR plasmids coupled with a firefly luciferase reporter were transfected in HepG2, HuH-7 and Caco-2 cells. We identified only two variants: SstI (rs5128) and BbvI (rs5225) in APOC3 3'UTR in the 2 groups of patients. Only the SstI-S2 rare allele was significantly associated with HTG (allele frequency 19,5% in HTG group vs. 9,5% in NTG group, p = 0.0045). In silico studies predicted a potential loss in the binding of 5 miRNAs induced by the S2 variant. These 5 miRNAs are all endogenously expressed in human liver and intestine, as well as in the cell models studied. However, in vitro, the S2 variant did not modulate APOC3 3'UTR reporter gene expression in HepG2, HuH-7 and Caco-2 cells. Our results do not confirm the hypothesis of a direct regulation of the APOC3 SstI variant by hepatic or intestinal miRNAs. Show less
Determination of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity is important for hyperchylomicronemia diagnosis, but remains both unreliable and cumbersome with current methods. Consequently by using human VLDL as Show more
Determination of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity is important for hyperchylomicronemia diagnosis, but remains both unreliable and cumbersome with current methods. Consequently by using human VLDL as substrate we developed a new LPL assay which does not require sonication, radioactive or fluorescent particles. Post-heparin plasma was added to the VLDL substrate prepared by ultracentrifugation of heat inactivated normolipidemic human serums, diluted in buffer, pH 8.15. Following incubation at 37°c, the NEFA (non esterified fatty acids) produced were assayed hourly for 4 hours. LPL activity was expressed as µmol/l/min after subtraction of hepatic lipase (HL) activity, obtained following LPL inhibition with NaCl 1.5 mmol/l. Molecular analysis of LPL, GPIHBP1, APOA5, APOC2, APOE genes was available for 62 patients. Our method was reproducible (coefficient of variation (CV): intra-assay 5.6%, inter-assay 7.1%), and tightly correlated with the conventional radiolabelled triolein emulsion method (n = 26, r = 0.88). Normal values were established at 34.8 ± 12.8 µmol/l/min (mean ± SD) from 20 control subjects. LPL activities obtained from 71 patients with documented history of major hypertriglyceridemia showed a trimodal distribution. Among the 11 patients with a very low LPL activity (< 10 µmol/l/min), 5 were homozygous or compound heterozygous for LPL or GPIHBP1 deleterious mutations, 3 were compound heterozygous for APOA5 deleterious mutations and the p.S19W APOA5 susceptibility variant, and 2 were free of any mutations in the usual candidate genes. No homozygous gene alteration in LPL, GPIHBP1 and APOC2 genes was found in any of the patients with LPL activity > 10 µmol/l/min. This new reproducible method is a valuable tool for routine diagnosis and reliably identifies LPL activity defects. Show less
Determination of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity is important for hyperchylomicronemia diagnosis, but remains both unreliable and cumbersome with current methods. Consequently by using human VLDL as Show more
Determination of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity is important for hyperchylomicronemia diagnosis, but remains both unreliable and cumbersome with current methods. Consequently by using human VLDL as substrate we developed a new LPL assay which does not require sonication, radioactive or fluorescent particles. Post-heparin plasma was added to the VLDL substrate prepared by ultracentrifugation of heat inactivated normolipidemic human serums, diluted in buffer, pH 8.15. Following incubation at 37°c, the NEFA (non esterified fatty acids) produced were assayed hourly for 4 hours. LPL activity was expressed as µmol/l/min after subtraction of hepatic lipase (HL) activity, obtained following LPL inhibition with NaCl 1.5 mmol/l. Molecular analysis of LPL, GPIHBP1, APOA5, APOC2, APOE genes was available for 62 patients. Our method was reproducible (coefficient of variation (CV): intra-assay 5.6%, inter-assay 7.1%), and tightly correlated with the conventional radiolabelled triolein emulsion method (n = 26, r = 0.88). Normal values were established at 34.8 ± 12.8 µmol/l/min (mean ± SD) from 20 control subjects. LPL activities obtained from 71 patients with documented history of major hypertriglyceridemia showed a trimodal distribution. Among the 11 patients with a very low LPL activity (<10 µmol/l/min), 5 were homozygous or compound heterozygous for LPL or GPIHBP1 deleterious mutations, 3 were compound heterozygous for APOA5 deleterious mutations and the p.S19W APOA5 susceptibility variant, and 2 were free of any mutations in the usual candidate genes. No homozygous gene alteration in LPL, GPIHBP1 and APOC2 genes was found in any of the patients with LPL activity >10 µmol/l/min. This new reproducible method is a valuable tool for routine diagnosis and reliably identifies LPL activity defects. Show less
APOA5 c.*158C>T (rs2266788), located in the 3' UTR, belongs to APOA5 haplotype 2 (APOA5*2), which is strongly associated with plasma triglyceride levels and modulates the occurrence of both moderate a Show more
APOA5 c.*158C>T (rs2266788), located in the 3' UTR, belongs to APOA5 haplotype 2 (APOA5*2), which is strongly associated with plasma triglyceride levels and modulates the occurrence of both moderate and severe hypertriglyceridemia. Individuals with APOA5*2 display reduced APOA5 expression at the posttranscriptional level. However, the functionality of this haplotype remains unclear. We hypothesized that the hypertriglyceridemic effects of APOA5*2 could involve miRNA regulation in the APOA5 3' UTR. Bioinformatic studies have identified the creation of a potential miRNA binding site for liver-expressed miR-485-5p (MIRN485-5p) in the mutant APOA5 3' UTR with the c.*158C allele. In human embryonic kidney 293T (HEK293T) cells cotransfected with an APOA5 3' UTR luciferase reporter vector and a miR485-5p precursor, c.*158C allele expression was significantly decreased. Moreover, in HuH-7 cells endogenously expressing miR-485-5p, we observed that luciferase activity was significantly lower in the presence of the c.*158C allele than in the presence of the c.*158T allele, which was completely reversed by a miR-485-5p inhibitor. We demonstrated that the rare c.*158C APOA5 allele creates a functional target site for liver-expressed miR-485-5p. Therefore, we propose that the well-documented hypertriglyceridemic effect of APOA5*2 involves an APOA5 posttranscriptional downregulation mediated by miR-485-5p. Show less
GPIHBP1 is a new endothelial binding site for lipoprotein lipase (LPL), the key enzyme for intravascular lipolysis of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TGRL). We have identified two new missense mutatio Show more
GPIHBP1 is a new endothelial binding site for lipoprotein lipase (LPL), the key enzyme for intravascular lipolysis of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TGRL). We have identified two new missense mutations of the GPIHBP1 gene, C89F and G175R, by systematic sequencing in a cohort of 376 hyperchylomicronemic patients without mutations on the LPL, APOC2, or APOA5 gene. Phenotypic expression and functional consequences of these two mutations were studied. We performed clinical and genotypic studies of probands and their families. GPIHBP1 functional alterations were studied in CHO pgsA-745 transfected cells. Probands are an adult with a homozygous G175R mutation and a child with a hemizygous C89F neomutation and a deletion of the second allele. C89F mutation was associated with a C14F signal peptide polymorphism on the same haplotype. Both patients had resistant hyperchylomicronemia, low LPL activity, and history of acute pancreatitis. In CHO pgsA-745 cells, both G175R and C14F variants reduce the expression of GPIHBP1 at the cell surface. C89F mutation is responsible for a drastic LPL-binding defect to GPIHBP1. C14F may further potentiate C89F effect. The emergence of hyperchylomicronemia in the generation after a neomutation further establishes a critical role for GPIHBP1 in TGRL physiopathology in humans. Our results highlight the crucial role of C65-C89 disulfide bond in LPL binding by GPIHBP1 Ly6 domain. Furthermore, we first report a mutation of the hydrophobic C-terminal domain that impairs GPIHBP1 membrane targeting. Show less
To provide phenotypic and functional data in new patients with APOA5 mutations and to identify genetic and metabolic factors influencing their phenotypic expression. By sequencing APOA5 gene in a coho Show more
To provide phenotypic and functional data in new patients with APOA5 mutations and to identify genetic and metabolic factors influencing their phenotypic expression. By sequencing APOA5 gene in a cohort of 286 hyperchylomicronemic subjects, free of LPL or APOC2 mutations, we identified 4 unrelated carriers of the Q97X mutation (3 heterozygotes and 1 homozygote) and one heterozygote with a new L242P mutation. Postheparin LPL activity level was reduced by about 50% in Q97X heterozygotes and more than 90% in the Q97X homozygote, but was normal in the L242P patient after resolution of hyperchylomicronemia. Plasma apoAV was undetectable in the Q97X homozygote and in the normal range in the L242P and Q97X heterozygous carriers. In Western blot studies, the association of apoAV with plasma lipoproteins was altered in Q97X heterozygous carriers but not in the L242P carrier. Hyperchylomicronemic heterozygotes for both mutations carried an additional APOA5 variant haplotype and/or APOE variant (E2 or E4). Type 2 diabetes or metabolic syndrome were not a major phenotypic determinant. The L242P mutation was present in a hyperchylomicronemic proband but its causal involvement remains to be established. The Q97X mutation was clearly involved in hyperchylomicronemia with evidence of concomitant altered intravascular lipolysis, and a complete apoAV deficiency in the homozygote. The phenotypic expression variability of APOA5 mutations was mostly influenced by compound heterozygosity with APOA5 variant haplotypes plus additional genetic factors, and in a lesser extent by the metabolic environment. Show less
While type 1 hyperlipidemia is associated with lipoprotein lipase or apoCII deficiencies, the etiology of type 5 hyperlipidemia remains largely unknown. We explored a new candidate gene, APOA5, for po Show more
While type 1 hyperlipidemia is associated with lipoprotein lipase or apoCII deficiencies, the etiology of type 5 hyperlipidemia remains largely unknown. We explored a new candidate gene, APOA5, for possible causative mutations in a pedigree of late-onset, vertically transmitted hyperchylomicronemia. A heterozygous Q139X mutation in APOA5 was present in both the proband and his affected son but was absent in 200 controls. It was subsequently found in 2 of 140 cases of hyperchylomicronemia. Haplotype analysis suggested the new Q139X as a founder mutation. Family studies showed that 5 of 9 total Q139X carriers had hyperchylomicronemia, 1 patient being homozygote. Severe hypertriglyceridemia in 8 heterozygotes was strictly associated with the presence on the second allele of 1 of 2 previously described triglyceride-raising minor APOA5 haplotypes. Furthermore, ultracentrifugation fraction analysis indicated in carriers an altered association of Apoa5 truncated and WT proteins to lipoproteins, whereas in normal plasma, Apoa5 associated with VLDL and HDL/LDL fractions. APOB100 kinetic studies in 3 severely dyslipidemic patients with Q139X revealed a major impairment of VLDL catabolism. Lipoprotein lipase activity and mass were dramatically reduced in dyslipidemic carriers, leading to severe lipolysis defect. Our observations strongly support in humans a role for APOA5 in lipolysis regulation and in familial hyperchylomicronemia. Show less