Abstract

Cholesterol bioavailability displays a high interindividual variability, partly due to genetic factors. Existing studies have focused on single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) analyzed individually, which only explained a minor fraction of the variability of this complex phenotype. The aim is to identify a combination of SNPs associated with a significant part of the variability in cholesterol bioavailability. Thirty-nine healthy adult males are given a standard test snack containing 80mg heptadeuterated (D7) cholesterol. The plasma D7-cholesterol concentration is measured at equilibrium 40 h after test snack intake. The D7-cholesterol response (D7-cholesterol/total cholesterol concentration) exhibits a relatively high interindividual variability (CV = 32%). The association of exonic SNPs in candidate genes (188 genes involved in or related to cholesterol metabolism) with the plasma D7-cholesterol response is assessed by univariate statistics followed by partial least squares regression. A significant model (p-value after cross-validation ANOVA = 1.64 × 10-7 ) that includes 8 SNPs (SOAT2-rs9658625, DNAH11-rs11768670, LIPC-rs690, MVK-rs2287218, GPAM-rs10787428, APOE-rs7412, CBS-rs234706, and WRN-rs1801196) explains 59.7% of the variance in cholesterol bioavailability (adjusted R²). Here a combination of SNPs is significantly associated with the variability in dietary cholesterol bioavailability in healthy adult males.

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