Abstract

A low-density lipoprotein turnover study was performed on six heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemic subjects and five control subjects. The diagnosis of the condition was clear-cut on biochemical, clinical, and genetic grounds. Kinetic analysis of the plasma decay curves gave the following mean values: (1) The plasma concentration of low density lipoprotein apoprotein (apoLDL) in the affected subjects was 247 mg/dl, a 2.5-fold increase over control values (98 mg/dl). (2) The calculated fractional catabolic rate of the intravascular apoLDL pool in the dyslipoproteinemics was reduced with respect to control data (16.4%/day versus 31.2%/day), and the half-life of the apolipoprotein was correspondingly increased (6.07 days versus 3.63 days). (3) The absolute catabolic rate of the apoLDL was 15.6 mg/kg/day in contrast to the lower value of 11.6 mg/kg/day in the control group. (4) A strong negative correlation was observed between the plasma apoLDL concentration and the fractional catabolic rate ( r = 0.96). We conclude from our data that increased apoLDL synthesis coupled with a defective or saturated catabolic mechanism is implicated in the pathogenesis of familial hypercholesterolemia.

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