• J Lipid Res · May 2010

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Genetic variation at the NPC1L1 gene locus, plasma lipoproteins, and heart disease risk in the elderly.

    • Eliana Polisecki, Inga Peter, Jason S Simon, Robert A Hegele, Michele Robertson, Ian Ford, James Shepherd, Christopher Packard, J Wouter Jukema, Anton J M de Craen, Rudi G J Westendorp, Brendan M Buckley, Ernst J Schaefer, and Prospective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk (PROSPER) Investigators.
    • Lipid Metabolism Laboratory, Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University, Boston, MA, USA. eliana.polisecki@tufts.edu
    • J Lipid Res. 2010 May 1;51(5):1201-7.

    AbstractNiemann-Pick C1-like 1 protein (NPC1L1) plays a critical role in intestinal cholesterol absorption. Our objective was to examine whether five variants (-133A>G, -18A>C, L272L, V1296V, and U3_28650A>G) at the NPC1L1 gene have effects on lipid levels, prevalence, and incidence of coronary heart disease (CHD) and lipid-lowering response to pravastatin. We studied 5,804 elderly participants from the PROSPER study, who were randomized to prava-statin 40 mg/day or placebo and were followed on average for 3.2 years. In the adjusted gender-pooled analyses, homozygous carriers of the minor alleles at four NPC1L1 sites (-18A>C, L272L, V1296V, and U3_28650A>G, minor allele frequencies 0.15-0.33) had 2-8% higher LDL-cholesterol (LDL-C) levels at baseline than homozygous carriers of the common alleles (P < 0.05). Homozygotes for the rare alleles also had a significant increase in the risk of CHD events on trial (range of hazard ratios 1.50-1.67; P < 0.02), regardless of the treatment regimen. The -133 A>G polymorphism and not other variants was associated with 6 month LDL-C lowering (P = 0.02). Our data indicate that variation in the NPC1L1 gene is associated with plasma total and LDL-C levels and CHD risk.

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