Abstract

The proband was a 53-year-old Japanese woman. Despite having no atherosclerotic vascular lesions on a physiological examination, markedly decreased levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) were always noted at her annual medical checkup. She also had corneal opacities but neither xanthoma nor tonsillar hypertrophy. A biochemical examination showed decreased levels of both apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) (<5 mg/dL) and lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity. Her brother and son also had low concentrations of HDL-cholesterol, suggesting the presence of a genetic abnormality. Therefore, a sequence analysis of the genes for ABCA1, LCAT and apoA-I proteins was performed in the proband. The analysis of the APOA1 gene revealed a novel homozygous two-nucleotide deletion in exon 4 (c.614_615delTC), which causes a frameshift after residue 205 of the apoA-I protein (p.Leu205fs). Since no mutation has been found in the ABCA1 or LCAT gene, functional abnormalities of the carboxyl-terminal region of the apoA-I protein in lipid binding might have caused the low HDL-cholesterol levels and decreased LCAT activity, possibly associated with corneal opacities but not premature CAD, in the patient.

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