Annals of medicine
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Apolipoprotein B (apo B) circulates in two distinct forms referred to as apo B100 and apo B48. Apo B48 is colinear with the amino-terminal half of apo B100 and arises as a result of a post-transcriptional modification, termed apo B mRNA editing. This process changes a single cytidine nucleotide in apo B100 mRNA thereby altering a CAA codon, encoding glutamine in apo B100, to a UAA codon, which specifies an in-frame stop codon in apo B48. ⋯ These differences arise because the requisite regions of apo B for interaction either with the low-density lipoprotein receptor or with apolipoprotein (a) are contained within the carboxyl terminus of apo B100. Apo B mRNA editing is regulated by species, tissue and cell-specific factors, one of which has been recently cloned. The further characterization of apo B mRNA editing, the first example of a mammalian gene regulated by post-transcriptional nucleotide alteration, will be important for an understanding of lipoprotein assembly.