Genetic effect of two APOA repeat polymorphisms (kringle 4 and pentanucleotide repeats) on plasma Lp(a) levels in American Samoans

Human Biology
K DePrinceM I Kamboh

Abstract

Elevated plasma lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] level has been established as an independent risk factor for atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease. Considerable ethnic group differences in the distribution of plasma Lp(a) levels have raised public health concerns. Recently, we have reported that Samoans have the lowest plasma Lp(a) levels of any population group. In the present investigation, we report the contribution of two apolipoprotein(a) (APOA) polymorphisms, the kringle 4 type 2 (K4) repeat and the pentanucleotide repeat (PNR), in affecting plasma Lp(a) levels in an American Samoan sample (n = 309). The K4 repeats ranged in size from 15 to 40. The common alleles contained repeats ranging from 26 to 36 with allele frequencies between 5.5% to 9.7%, and these accounted for 82% of all alleles. An inverse relationship between K4 repeat number and plasma Lp(a) level was observed for single-banded (r = -0.59, p = 0.0001) and double-banded phenotypes (r = -0.50, p = 0.0001). This polymorphism explained 60% of the variation in plasma Lp(a) level in American Samoans. For the PNR polymorphism, five different repeat alleles and eight different genotypes were identified; the most common allele was eight repeats. The *8 PNR allele was ass...Continue Reading

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