Abstract
Screening of 932 adults on the Pacific island of Kosrae for plasma plant sterol levels disclosed three subjects, two of them asymptomatic, with phytosterolemia. Sequencing the ATP binding cassette subfamily G member 8 (ABCG8) gene revealed a novel exon 2 mutation that causes a change in codon 24 from glutamine to histidine and a frame shift followed by a premature stop codon, precluding the formation of a functional ABCG8 protein. Genotyping of 1,090 Kosraens revealed 150 as carriers, a 13.8% carrier rate. DNA sequencing of 67 carriers revealed the same mutation as in the probands. In carriers, plasma campesterol and sitosterol levels were 55% and 30% higher, respectively, than in noncarriers. Moreover, compared with noncarriers, carriers showed 21% lower plasma levels of lathosterol, a surrogate marker for cholesterol biosynthesis. There was no difference between the groups in plasma total cholesterol, triglycerides, apolipoprotein B, or apolipoprotein A-I levels. In summary, on the island of Kosrae, a strong founder effect of a mutant ABCG8 allele results in a large number of carriers with increased plasma plant sterol levels and decreased lathosterol levels. The latter finding suggests that heterozygosity for a mutated ABCG8 allele results in a modest increase in dietary cholesterol absorption and a decrease in cholesterol biosynthesis.
Highlights
Screening of 932 adults on the Pacific island of Kosrae for plasma plant sterol levels disclosed three subjects, two of them asymptomatic, with phytosterolemia
Kosraen carriers had increased plasma plant sterol levels and a decrease in a sterol marker for cholesterol biosynthesis. These findings indicate that in Kosrae, the ATP binding cassette subfamily G member 8 (ABCG8) locus is an important modifier of plasma plant sterol levels with a moderate effect on cholesterol biosynthesis, presumably attributable to changes in intestinal cholesterol absorption
The clustering in one nuclear family of two subjects with exceptionally high plasma plant sterol levels strongly suggested the diagnosis of phytosterolemia
Summary
Screening of 932 adults on the Pacific island of Kosrae for plasma plant sterol levels disclosed three subjects, two of them asymptomatic, with phytosterolemia. On the island of Kosrae, a strong founder effect of a mutant ABCG8 allele results in a large number of carriers with increased plasma plant sterol levels and decreased lathosterol levels. The latter finding suggests that heterozygosity for a mutated ABCG8 allele results in a modest increase in dietary cholesterol absorption and a decrease in cholesterol biosynthesis.—Sehayek, E., H. Phytosterolemia on the island of Kosrae: founder effect for a novel ABCG8 mutation results in high carrier rate and increased plasma plant sterol levels.
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