Abstract
ABCA1 -565C/T gene promoter variants have been associated with the severity of coronary artery disease in Western populations. The purpose of our study was to investigate the association between the -565C/T gene polymorphism and coronary artery disease severity and cholesterol efflux in the Chinese Han population. A cohort of 298 acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients and 541 healthy controls was genotyped using the highly sensitive ligase detection reaction. ABCA1 -565C/T genotype was correlated with the clinical features of 164 acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients. Monocytes from patients with various -565C/T gene polymorphisms were isolated and differentiated into foam cells by coincubation with [(3)H]-labeled acetyl-low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. ABCA1 mRNA and protein expression levels were evaluated, as well as cellular cholesterol efflux. The frequency of the TT genotype in the -565C/T polymorphism of ACS patients was significantly increased when compared with controls (0.211 vs. 0.162, p<0.05). The TT genotype, but not the CT or CC genotypes, in the -565C/T gene polymorphism correlated with the severity of the coronary lesion observed in AMI patients. Patients with the TT homozygote genotype also exhibited significantly lower cellular cholesterol efflux (TT [6.37%±0.554%]) levels than controls and also had the lowest levels of ABCA1 mRNA and protein expression among the group of variants. In contrast, cholesterol efflux levels in AMI patients with CT [11.35%±3.975%] and CC ([15.32%±6.293%]) genotypes were not significantly different from controls. Impaired ABCA1-mediated cholesterol efflux in macrophages may be associated with the severity of the coronary lesions in AMI patients with the TT genotype at the -565C/T gene polymorphism.
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