AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines three families with familial heterozygous hypobetalipoproteinemia (FHBL) linked to different mutations producing truncated apolipoprotein Bs (apoBs).
  • In the first family, carriers exhibited symptoms like fat malabsorption and fatty liver due to a mutation leading to a very short apoB.
  • The second family showed premature cerebrovascular disease and fatty liver associated with a medium-sized truncated apoB, while the third family highlighted that environmental factors, such as alcohol consumption, play a role in liver conditions associated with longer truncated apoBs.
  • Overall, the findings indicate distinct health impacts and conditions based on the size of apoBs and the presence of additional environmental factors.

Article Abstract

We report the clinical phenotype in three kindreds with familial heterozygous hypobetalipoproteinemia (FHBL) carrying novel truncated apolipoprotein Bs (apoBs) of different sizes (apoB-8.15, apoB-33.4 and apoB-75.7). In D.A. kindred, we found three carriers of a C-deletion in exon 10 leading to the synthesis of apoB-8.15 not detectable in plasma. They showed steatorrhea and fatty liver. In N.L. kindred, the proband is heterozygous for a nonsense mutation in exon 26, leading to the formation of apoB-33.4. He had premature cerebrovascular disease and fatty liver; two apoB-33.4 carriers in this kindred showed only fatty liver. In B.E. kindred, the proband is heterozygous for a T-deletion in exon 26, which converts tyrosine at codon 3435 into a stop codon, resulting in apoB-75.7. The proband, a heavy alcohol drinker, had steatohepatitis, whereas his teetotaller daughter, an apoB-75.7 carrier, had no detectable fatty liver. This study suggests that: i) fatty liver invariably develops in FHBL carriers of short and medium-size truncated apoBs (< apoB-48), but its occurrence needs additional environmental factors in carriers of longer apoB forms; ii) intestinal lipid malabsorption develops only in carriers of short truncated apoBs, which are not secreted into the plasma; and iii) cerebrovascular disease due to premature atherosclerosis may occur even in FHBL subjects.

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