A family-based study of hyperinsulinemia and hypertriglyceridemia in heterozygous lipoprotein lipase deficiency.
Methods: A case is presented of predisposing a patient's father with obligate heterozygous lipoprotein lipase (LPL) deficiency to mild hypertriglyceridemia in Japanese I-family members (n=8) with patient DI, who was a compound heterozygote for a novel missense mutation of G154V (GG(716)C-->GTC/Gly(154) Val) in exon 5 and a novel splice mutation (Int8/5'-dss/t(+2)c; a T-to-C transition in the invariant GT at position +2 of the 5' donor splice site (dss)) in intron 8 of the LPL gene.
Results: The patient's father and paternal grandmother were heterozygotes for the Int8/5'-dss/t(+2)c allele, while the patient's mother and maternal grandmother were heterozygotes for the G154V allele. These four heterozygous carriers with one defective LPL allele showed 45-57% of the mean LPL activity and mass in the post-heparin plasma (PHP) observed in normal individuals. Among the four heterozygous carriers, the patient's father, who was <40 years old, nonobese and hyperinsulinemia, manifested mild hypertriglyceridemia (type IV hyperlipoproteinemia). The remaining three healthy heterozygous carriers (two were >40 years old and the other was <40 years old) were all normolipidemic state.
Conclusions: In this family, hyperinsulinemia as a marker of insulin resistance may be a strong determinant of hypertriglyceridemia in the carrier with heterozygous LPL deficiency.