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Loss-of-function mutations in APOC3, triglycerides, and coronary disease.

Journal article published in 2014 by Tang Zz, He Zhang, Assimes Tl, Chenyi Xue, Wu Yin, Natalie Van Zuydam, Nicholas Wareham, Hugh Watkins, Cj J. Willer, Jg G. Wilson, Rp P. Tracy, No O. Stitziel, Zz-Z. Tang, Kathleen Stirrups, and Hdl Working Group of the Exome Sequencing Project Tg and other authors.
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Plasma triglyceride levels are heritable and are correlated with the risk of coronary heart disease. Sequencing of the protein-coding regions of the human genome (the exome) has the potential to identify rare mutations that have a large effect on phenotype. METHODS: We sequenced the protein-coding regions of 18,666 genes in each of 3734 participants of European or African ancestry in the Exome Sequencing Project. We conducted tests to determine whether rare mutations in coding sequence, individually or in aggregate within a gene, were associated with plasma triglyceride levels. For mutations associated with triglyceride levels, we subsequently evaluated their association with the risk of coronary heart disease in 110,970 persons. RESULTS: An aggregate of rare mutations in the gene encoding apolipoprotein C3 (APOC3) was associated with lower plasma triglyceride levels. Among the four mutations that drove this result, three were loss-of-function mutations: a nonsense mutation (R19X) and two splice-site mutations (IVS2+1G→A and IVS3+1G→T). The fourth was a missense mutation (A43T). Approximately 1 in 150 persons in the study was a heterozygous carrier of at least one of these four mutations. Triglyceride levels in the carriers were 39% lower than levels in noncarriers (P