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  5. Inverse association between apolipoprotein C-II and cardiovascular mortality: role of lipoprotein lipase activity modulation

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Article
English
2023

Inverse association between apolipoprotein C-II and cardiovascular mortality: role of lipoprotein lipase activity modulation

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English
2023
European Heart Journal
Vol 44 (25)
DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehad261

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Claude Bouchard
Claude Bouchard

Pennington Biomedical Research Center

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Günther Silbernagel
Yan Chen
Martin Rief
+10 more

Abstract

Apolipoprotein C-II (ApoC-II) is thought to activate lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and is therefore a possible target for treating hypertriglyceridemia. Its relationship with cardiovascular risk has not been investigated in large-scale epidemiologic studies, particularly allowing for apolipoprotein C-III (ApoC-III), an LPL antagonist. Furthermore, the exact mechanism of ApoC-II-mediated LPL activation is unclear.ApoC-II was measured in 3141 LURIC participants of which 590 died from cardiovascular diseases during a median (inter-quartile range) follow-up of 9.9 (8.7-10.7) years. Apolipoprotein C-II-mediated activation of the glycosylphosphatidylinositol high-density lipoprotein binding protein 1 (GPIHBP1)-LPL complex was studied using enzymatic activity assays with fluorometric lipase and very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) substrates. The mean ApoC-II concentration was 4.5 (2.4) mg/dL. The relationship of ApoC-II quintiles with cardiovascular mortality exhibited a trend toward an inverse J-shape, with the highest risk in the first (lowest) quintile and lowest risk in the middle quintile. Compared with the first quintile, all other quintiles were associated with decreased cardiovascular mortality after multivariate adjustments including ApoC-III as a covariate (all P < 0.05). In experiments using fluorometric substrate-based lipase assays, there was a bell-shaped relationship for the effect of ApoC-II on GPIHBP1-LPL activity when exogenous ApoC-II was added. In ApoC-II-containing VLDL substrate-based lipase assays, GPIHBP1-LPL enzymatic activity was almost completely blocked by a neutralizing anti-ApoC-II antibody.The present epidemiologic data suggest that increasing low circulating ApoC-II levels may reduce cardiovascular risk. This conclusion is supported by the observation that optimal ApoC-II concentrations are required for maximal GPIHBP1-LPL enzymatic activity.

How to cite this publication

Günther Silbernagel, Yan Chen, Martin Rief, Marcus E. Kleber, Michael M. Hoffmann, Tatjana Stojaković, Andreas Stang, Mark A. Sarzynski, Claude Bouchard, Winfried März, Yuewei Qian, Hubert Scharnagl, Robert J. Konrad (2023). Inverse association between apolipoprotein C-II and cardiovascular mortality: role of lipoprotein lipase activity modulation. European Heart Journal, 44(25), pp. 2335-2345, DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehad261.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2023

Authors

13

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

European Heart Journal

DOI

10.1093/eurheartj/ehad261

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