Abstract

Proteins involved in lipoprotein metabolism can modulate cardiovascular health. While often measured to assess adult metabolic diseases, little is known about the proteomes of lipoproteins and their relation to metabolic dysregulation and underlying inflammation in undernourished child populations. The objective of this population study was to globally characterize plasma proteins systemically associated with HDL, LDL, and triglycerides in 500 Nepalese children. Abnormal lipid profiles characterized by elevated plasma triglycerides and low HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C) concentrations were common, especially in children with subclinical inflammation. Among 982 proteins analyzed, the relative abundance of 11, 12, and 52 plasma proteins was correlated with LDL-cholesterol (r = −0.43∼0.70), triglycerides (r = −0.39∼0.53), and HDL-C (r = −0.49∼0.79) concentrations, respectively. These proteins included apolipoproteins and numerous unexpected intracellular and extracellular matrix binding proteins, likely originating in hepatic and peripheral tissues. Relative abundance of two-thirds of the HDL proteome varied with inflammation, with acute phase reactants higher by 4∼40%, and proteins involved in HDL biosynthesis, cholesterol efflux, vitamin transport, angiogenesis, and tissue repair lower by 3∼20%. Untargeted plasma proteomics detects comprehensive sets of both known and novel lipoprotein-associated proteins likely reflecting systemic regulation of lipoprotein metabolism and vascular homeostasis. Inflammation-altered distributions of the HDL proteome may be predisposing undernourished populations to early chronic disease.

Highlights

  • Proteins involved in lipoprotein metabolism can modulate cardiovascular health

  • We report summary statistics from the Linear mixed effects (LME) models, including number of child plasma samples in which a protein was detected, percent change (%) in lipid or lipoprotein concentration per 2-fold (100%) increase in relative abundance of a protein, P value calculated by using a twosided test of a null hypothesis that there is no association between an individual protein and lipid or lipoprotein, q as false discovery rate (FDR)-adjusted P value to correct multiple comparisons [34], and r as a correlation coefficient between measured plasma lipid or lipoprotein concentration and its respective best linear unbiased prediction from the LME models [35]

  • Among LDL and triglyceride proteomes, relative abundance of one and four proteins (i.e., ANTXR2, retinol-binding protein 4 (RBP4), apoC-III, and phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP)), respectively, were reduced in children with inflammation compared with children without inflammation. In this southern plains district of Nepal, reflecting undernourished living conditions for about 60% of the country’s population and that typify a wider rural region of Gangetic South Asia, abnormal lipid and lipoprotein profiles were common in young school-aged children, characterized by elevated plasma triglycerides, low HDL-C concentrations, and subclinical inflammation

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Summary

Introduction

While often measured to assess adult metabolic diseases, little is known about the proteomes of lipoproteins and their relation to metabolic dysregulation and underlying inflammation in undernourished child populations. The objective of this population study was to globally characterize plasma proteins systemically associated with HDL, LDL, and triglycerides in 500 Nepalese children. Lipoproteins, circulating complexes of lipid-bound proteins, play central roles in the transport and metabolism of lipids They support energy metabolism, cholesterol and phospholipids supply to cell membranes, and fat-soluble vitamin transport. Except for apoB, other apolipoproteins are exchangeable between different lipoprotein complexes, while the core structural apolipoproteins confer the unique properties of different classes of lipoproteins [4]

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