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Vol. 11, Issue 6, 1043-1052, June 2001
LETTER
Sequence Diversity in Genes of Lipid Metabolism
Christine Kim
Garcia,1
Gabriele
Mues,2
Yuanlan
Liao,1
Tommy
Hyatt,1
Nila
Patil,3
Jonathan C.
Cohen,1 and
Helen H.
Hobbs1,4
Departments of 1 Internal Medicine and Molecular Genetics
and 2 Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical
Center at Dallas, Dallas, Texas 75390-9046, USA; 3 Affymetrix,
Inc., Santa Clara, California 95051, USA
Elevated plasma lipoprotein levels play a crucial role in the
development of coronary artery disease. Genetic factors strongly influence the levels of plasma lipoproteins, but the genes and sequence
variations contributing to the most common forms of dyslipidemias are
not known. We used GeneChip probe arrays to resequence the coding
regions of 10 key genes of lipid metabolism. The sequences of these
genes were analyzed in 80 dyslipidemic individuals. Fourteen nonsynonymous and twenty-two synonymous single nucleotide changes were
identified that could be confirmed by conventional sequencing. Seven of
the fourteen nonsynonymous sequence variants were polymorphisms with
allele frequency >1% in the general population. The remaining seven
were not found in normolipidemic controls (25 Caucasians and 25 African-Americans). The relationship between nonsynonymous sequence
variations and various dyslipidemias was explored in association and
family studies. No evidence was found for coding sequence variations in
any of the 10 genes contributing to dyslipidemia. Only a single
sequence variation, a missense mutation in the low density lipoprotein
receptor gene, co-segregated with hyperlipidemia in the proband's
family. This study illustrates some of the difficulties associated with
identifying sequence variations contributing to complex traits.
4
Corresponding author.
11:1043-1052 ©2001 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/01 $5.00

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