A New Locus for Autosomal Recessive Hypercholesterolemia Maps to Human Chromosome 15q25-q26

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Summary

High serum cholesterol is an established risk factor for cardiovascular disease and is the prime target for therapeutic intervention in large groups of patients. The development of modern treatments for this major risk factor was propelled by the early realization that forms of severe hypercholesterolemia could be caused by dominantly inherited defects in the LDL receptor or in the APOB gene. Further understanding of the mechanisms contributing to early atherosclerosis will allow for new targets for therapy. We therefore identified and investigated the genetics of families from Sardinia that have recessive inheritance of precocious hypercholesterolemia. We used five families in an analysis of linkage of the autosomal recessive hypercholesterolemia locus, termed “ARH1,” to chromosome 15q25-q26. A genomewide search mapped the disease-causing gene with a LOD score of 3.3 and excluded major contributions to the phenotype of other genes. A candidate gene present in the mapped chromosome region—the ligand-activated liver-transcription-factor gene ARP1 (apolipoprotein regulatory-protein gene)—has been excluded after DNA sequencing. The close-bred nature of the Sardinian population offers unique opportunities for isolation of this hypercholesterolemia-causing gene.

Familial hypercholesterolemia
Autosomal recessive hypercholesterolemia
Linkage
Liver transcription factors

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