Abstract

Plasma apolipoprotein (apo) A-IV concentration was determined by immunoelectrophoretic assay (EIA) in 119 nuclear families. No significant effect of concomitants such as age, weight, height, body mass index, tobacco, and alcohol consumption was observed on apo A-IV levels in men and in boys. In women, contraceptive use and hormonal status affected apo A-IV levels. In girls, only age influenced the quantitative phenotype. After adjusting by specific concomitants significant correlations were observed between apo A-IV levels and triglycerides, apolipoprotein A-I and apo B levels, suggesting a role of apolipoprotein A-IV in the hepatic lipid metabolism. Intrafamilial correlations were estimated to investigate the plausibility of a common family factor. The results obtained in this study showed a significant correlation between family members with the exception of mother-daughter pairs. Using a variance components model, the contribution of genetic and environmental factors was then investigated. Different statistical models were used and two major hypotheses were statistically acceptable: the first hypothesis supports that shared and specific environmental factors explain 35 and 65%, respectively, of the total adjusted plasma apo A-IV variation. The fraction of apo A-IV variability attributable to genetic factors was null. The second hypothesis supports that the fraction of variability attributable to apo A-IV genetic variation is 67% and the common spouse environmental factors are responsible for 33% of the total variability and no specific environmental effect was found. Among the two hypotheses, taking account of the metabolism function, we support the first one without excluding gene-environment interactions which could mask the genetic influence.

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