Evidence of a Polygenic Origin of Extreme High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol Levels

Author:

Motazacker Mohammad Mahdi1,Peter Jorge1,Treskes Marco1,Shoulders Carol C.1,Kuivenhoven Jan Albert1,Hovingh G. Kees1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Experimental Vascular Medicine (M.M.M., J.P.) and Department of Vascular Medicine (M.M.M., G.K.H.), Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Department of Biochemistry, Tergooi Ziekenhuizen Hilversum, Hilversum, The Netherlands (M.T.); Centre of Endocrinology, William Harvey Research Institute, Queen Mary University of London, London, United Kingdom (C.C.S.); and Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen,...

Abstract

Objective— There are several known monogenic causes of high and low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels, but traditional sequencing studies have had limited success in identifying mutations in the majority of individuals with extreme HDL-C levels. The aim of this study was to assess the power of a targeted high-throughput sequencing strategy to elucidate the genetic basis of extreme HDL-C phenotypes. Approach and Results— We sequenced 195 genes with either established or implicated roles in lipid and lipoprotein metabolism plus 78 lipid-unrelated genes in patients with HDL-C <1st (n=40) or >99th (n=40) percentile values, and the results were compared with those of 498 individuals representative of the Dutch general population and 95 subjects with normal HDL-C (between 40th and 60th percentile values). The extreme HDL cohort carried more rare nonsynonymous variants in the lipid geneset than both the general population (odds ratio, 1.39; P =0.019) and normal HDL-C (odds ratio, 1.43; P =0.040) cohorts. The prevalence of such variants in the lipid-related and lipid-unrelated genesets was similar in the control groups, indicative of equal mutation rates. In the extreme HDL cohort, however, there was enrichment of rare nonsynonymous variants in the lipid versus the control geneset (odds ratio, 2.23; P <0.0001), and 70% of the lipid-related variants altered conserved nucleotides. The lipid geneset comprised 4 nonsense, 10 splice-site, and 8 coding indel variants, whereas the control geneset contained only 1 such variant. In the lipid geneset, 87% and 28% of the patients carried ≥2 and ≥5 rare variants. Conclusions— This study suggests that most extreme HDL-C phenotypes have a polygenic origin.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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